The Peterborough Examiner

Final payments for basic income set for March

About 2,000 people in Lindsay participat­ing in cancelled pilot

- SHAWN JEFFORDS The Canadian Press

LINDSAY — About 2,000 people in Lindsay participat­ing in Ontario’s basic income pilot will receive their last payment on March 31, 2019, the province says, but an anti-poverty activist says the six-month wind down will still hurt many who were depending on the program.

After pulling the plug on the pilot last month, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government said Friday the final payments to the 4,000 low-income recipients in Lindsay and three other Ontario cities will be made on that date.

The clarificat­ion comes after Social Services Minister Lisa MacLeod denied reports that the

payments would end in August, stressing there would be a “lengthy and compassion­ate runway” to end the program aimed at lifting people out of poverty that was launched by the former Liberal government.

“We have a broken social service system,” MacLeod said in a statement. “A research project that helps less than 4,000 people is not the answer and provides no hope to nearly two million Ontarians who are trapped in a cycle of poverty.”

Along with the cancellati­on of the pilot, Ontario promised to complete a review of the province’s social assistance programs by Nov. 8.

The basic income pilot project was set to run for three years, providing payments to 4,000 lowincome people in communitie­s including Hamilton, Brantford, Thunder Bay and Lindsay. 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 $150-million pilot, but MacLeod later said it would reverse course because the program was “failing” — a claim experts have disputed.

Tom Cooper of the Hamilton Roundtable for Poverty Reduction said the six-month wind down will not be enough time for many people.

“It still leaves many basic income participan­ts in impossible situations,” he said. “Many have signed one year lease agreements with landlords and they can’t get out of those leases and they can’t afford their new rent. There’s many people who plan to go back to school in September. Whether that will still be a reality for them with a longer wind down is questionab­le.”

Cooper said the government has only now extended the wind down because it was under pressure.

“While it seems that this might be a little bit longer wind down than initially feared, I think that’s only because there was so much pressure on them and there was very little compassion shown by the government in the early days,” he said.

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