Toronto Star

Federal government unlikely to rescue Ontario’s basic income pilot project,

Federal NDP leader calls for plan’s continuati­on

- BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH With files from Laurie Monsebraat­en

OTTAWA— Ontario’s basic income pilot project — seen as a key test of potential remedies to reduce poverty — appears destined to end prematurel­y as the federal government suggests it’s not going to rescue a program axed by the province. NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh on Tuesday called on Ottawa to step in and continue the program, saying it will produce “invaluable” data.

But that call to action got a cool response from the office of Jean-Yves Duclos, the federal minister of families, children and social developmen­t, who was given marching orders by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to craft a poverty reduction strategy.

Duclos spokespers­on Valérie Glazer said that Liberal government initiative­s, such as the child benefit, have already helped lift family members out of poverty.

And while she said Ottawa is open to sharing data with provinces launching income initiative­s, “ultimately the design of provincial social programs, such as a basic income, is up to provincial government­s.”

Dominic LeBlanc, minister of intergover­nmental and northern affairs and internal trade, has also shown little enthusiasm for taking up the program, saying that Ottawa can’t serve as a “court of appeal.

“There are areas of provincial jurisdicti­on where we won’t be afraid to voice our policy difference­s or our political difference­s, but at the end of the day they are accountabl­e to their voters for those decisions,” LeBlanc told the Star’s Susan Delacourt earlier this month.

The basic income pilot project — launched by the former Liberal government in Ontario in 2017 — provides $1,400 a month, no-strings-attached for people living in poverty. Those with disabiliti­es receive an additional $500 a month. Some 4,000 people in Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Lindsay are participat­ing in the program, which is meant to help guide future government efforts to reduce poverty.

During the election, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves pledged to keep the program but once in power, they backtracke­d on that vow and instead announced it would end in March, one year earlier than planned.

Last week, more than 100 Canadian CEO joined together to urge Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Social Services Minister Lisa MacLeod to reverse the decision to cut short the trial. “We see a guaranteed basic income as a business-friendly approach to address the increasing financial precarity of our citizens and revitalize the economy,” the executives said in their letter.

Speaking at an innovation conference in Ottawa Tuesday, Singh urged Ottawa to step in and fund the final year of the $150-million project.

“It’s actually a great deal for us to be able to have access to this important data with a very reasonable investment given that most of the upfront costs of this pilot project has been taken care of,” Singh said later in an interview.

“I think we can actually make an evidence-based decision that this program can work,” he said

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