The Welland Tribune

PCs admit scrapping program breaks election promise //

Axing program broke PC election promise

- ROB FERGUSON

Conceding she broke a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve election promise by axing a Wynne-era pilot program aimed at finding a new path for people on welfare, Social Services Minister Lisa MacLeod says she made a “tough decision.”

The basic income pilot project involving about 6,000 people in the Hamilton, Brant, Lindsay, and Thunder Bay areas was a “disincenti­ve” for people to find jobs, MacLeod told reporters Wednesday.

“When you’re encouragin­g people to accept money without strings attached, it really doesn’t send a message that our ministry and our government wants to send,” she said.

“We want to get people back on track and make them productive members of society where that’s possible.”

The three-year pilot project, which cost $50 million annually, was designed by Kathleen Wynne’s Liberal government with help from former PC senator Hugh Segal. It gave single participan­ts just under $17,000 annually and couples just over $24,000 in hopes the money — about double standard welfare rates — would boost their odds of finding employment and improving their housing, health and nutrition.

Critics of the cancellati­on said the fledgling program enabled participan­ts to move into apartments and go back to college, university or other training programs to lift themselves off social assistance.

“This minister is callously dashing their hopes for the future,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath. “This minister is out of touch. She has no idea what people living in poverty are facing.”

But MacLeod insisted the program wasn’t living up to its promise, although she could not provide any details or analysis when she announced the decision Tuesday. On the same day she also revealed a planned three per cent welfare increase for September would be cut in half.

“The decision (was) in the campaign, and you find the realities when you’re in government,” MacLeod said before she walked away from reporters’ questions for the second day in a row.

During the campaign, a spokespers­on for PC Leader Doug Ford said “Nope” when asked if the basic income pilot would be scrapped, and added, “We look forward to seeing the results.”

Green Leader Mike Schreiner said the decision on the pilot program — leaving participan­ts with an uncertain future — appears to be based on ideology given the lack of a detailed explanatio­n from MacLeod.

“It’s cruel to rip that away from people with one month’s notice and clearly having no evidence, analysis or facts to back up the decision they made,” added Schreiner, the MPP for Guelph.

He said the basic income pilot had the potential to be a “small government, non-bureaucrat­ic solution to eliminate poverty,” providing eligible recipients with money while saving on costly staff time for welfare case workers — who MacLeod lamented spend the vast majority of their time on paperwork.

The minister’s words about improving incentives to get people off welfare ring hollow because the Conservati­ves are suspending rules allowing social assistance recipients to keep $400 monthly, up from $200, earned with part-time jobs, said interim Liberal Leader John Fraser.

“It’s all doublespea­k. She’s trying to say one thing and doing absolutely the other,” he added, pleading with the new government to continue the basic income pilot project that thousands of people “took a chance” on in hopes of finding a better way.

“The government owes them the respect to continue the program, and more importantl­y to continue the program to get the informatio­n that Ontarians need to find a way to help lift people out of poverty, to create incentives.”

MacLeod said people on the pilot program will be treated “ethically and humanely.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Lisa Macleod, Ontario's Children, Community and Social Services Minister, said the former Liberal pilot program was a “disencenti­ve” for people to find jobs. Ending it was a tough decision, she said.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS Lisa Macleod, Ontario's Children, Community and Social Services Minister, said the former Liberal pilot program was a “disencenti­ve” for people to find jobs. Ending it was a tough decision, she said.

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