The Hamilton Spectator

Mayors from four Ontario cities ask Ottawa to take over province’s basic income project //

Mayors urge federal government to take over

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — The mayors of four Ontario cities are urging the federal government to take over a basic income pilot project that’s being cut short by the province, arguing the program provides valuable data that could be used to address poverty.

In a joint letter, the mayors of Hamilton, Thunder Bay, Brantford and Kawartha Lakes — communitie­s that participat­ed in the pilot — called on federal Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos to assume oversight of the program, which the province’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have claimed is failing.

“The Ontario government’s cancellati­on of the pilot is distressin­g to participan­ts and discouragi­ng to all seeking a better way to assist vulnerable citizens,” the mayors wrote in the letter sent to Ottawa this week.

“Federal oversight of the Ontario Basic Income Pilot project would be the best option to revive the critical informatio­n that will be generated, protect pilot participan­ts from crisis who entered into the program in good faith and ensure the funds that have already been spent on this program are not wasted.”

The mayors added that the program was being watched by jurisdicti­ons around the world, with delegation­s from the U.K., Japan, South Korea and the United States expressing interest.

When asked about the mayors’ letter, a spokespers­on for Duclos said the federal government is open to sharing data with provinces that are launching guaranteed annual income initiative­s but noted that the design of such programs is up to those government­s.

The basic income pilot was launched under the former Liberal government and was set to run for three years at a cost of $150 million. Under the project, single participan­ts receive up to $16,989 a year while couples receive up to $24,027, less 50 per cent of any earned income.

The Tories had promised during the spring election to preserve the pilot, but Social Services Minister Lisa MacLeod said in July that the new government would change course because the program wasn’t working — a claim experts have disputed.

The program’s 4,000 participan­ts will now receive their final payments from the government next March, the government has said.

Hamilton Mayor Fred Eisenberge­r said he has doubts about the claims the Tories are using to justify cancelling the pilot. The project’s success or failure can’t be determined without getting to the end of the program and evaluating the data gathered, he said.

“I think they’re making that up as they go along,” he said. “Clearly, this program was working, by witness of all of the testimonia­ls that were out there.”

Eisenberge­r said that he’s hopeful the federal government could negotiate to obtain the data gathered during the first year of the pilot and see the program through to completion.

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