Ottawa Citizen

Feds failing on pledge to assist disabled people

Tepid benefit in budget won't help us thrive, Rabia Khedr and Michelle Hewitt write.

- Rabia Khedr is the national director of Disability Without Poverty and Michelle Hewitt is the chair of Disability Without Poverty.

The federal government has been promising a federal disability benefit since 2020 — touted as a game changer for the many persons with disabiliti­es living in poverty in this country. It has not lived up to its promise.

It took three years to turn that promise into legislatio­n, with cross-partisan approval, paving the way for the historic Canada Disability Benefit (CDB). And it took another year for that legislatio­n to be included in this month's federal budget.

You'd think the disability community would be ecstatic that long-awaited financial relief is finally coming our way. Instead, some of us are deeply disappoint­ed, and many of us are angry — but we are ready to put our stories before our legislated officials once again, urging they heed the call of disabled people.

The federal budget only set aside $200 a month per person for the CDB, which it will not roll out for another year and will only reach a fraction of those living in disability poverty (those few who have disability tax credit status). This falls far short of the grandstand­ing the Liberal government made about ending the spiral of disability poverty in Canada.

At Disability Without Poverty, an organizati­on led by disabled Canadians for disabled Canadians, we have been doing the groundwork to help shape the CDB and address the needs of Canadians with disabiliti­es.

In our recent report, titled Disability With Possibilit­y: What We Learned From Disabled People Across Canada on Shaping the Canada Disability Benefit, we asked thousands of disabled Canadians how a properly funded

CDB could change their lives for the better. We learned a substantiv­e CDB would allow them to thrive rather than struggle to survive.

We heard from disabled people who live in the most marginal, vulnerable situations, including racialized people, refugees and newly arrived immigrants, the 2SLGBTQ+ community, from those in precarious housing or homeless, from the Indigenous community, from people living in institutio­ns and from people who have been incarcerat­ed.

Using our network of grassroots activists, we heard from a range of voices that are usually ignored. But their numbers are not small.

Disability comprises 27 per cent of the Canadian population. It is the largest minority that anyone can join at any time. Disability crosses all socioecono­mic and racial divides. In our study, we found over one-third of disabled participan­ts were also carers to other disabled people.

So, what do they need? Our research found an adequately funded federal benefit could make massive changes to their lives.

One person told us he would buy medication that is not funded by his province. It costs $9 a day and not taking it constantly puts him back in hospital. In a 30-day month, $9 is $270. This new benefit would not even cover this most modest, life-changing need.

Andy from B.C. told us an adequately funded CDB “would revolution­ize my life, making basic necessitie­s accessible rather than luxuries.”

Tammy from Nova Scotia says: “Receiving the CDB would make such a difference between struggling to exist and having a life worth living. People shouldn't have to decide between paying rent and buying groceries.”

This benefit has never been about access to fancy cars or vacations. It is about dignity and autonomy for Canadians who need help. They are not asking for a handout, but a hand up. Instead, the government pulled its hand away. Our report identified eight areas where people said they would spend the benefit ranging from nutrition to personal care to transporta­tion.

On housing stability, Indigo from Montreal said: “Trying to hustle to have enough money to pay rent frequently makes my disability worse.”

Unfortunat­ely, the $200 per month budgeted by the federal government keeps disabled people in Canada in legislated poverty.

The CDB could open up a world of possibilit­y for disabled people, but to make this happen, it must be funded adequately.

The federal government must reduce poverty and support the financial security of persons with disabiliti­es — as they promised — because $200 per month doesn't get us there.

In a just society, we would help people such as Paula, who dreams “about the possibilit­y of a future where I'm a valued and contributi­ng member of society.”

They have opened the door. We won't let them close it. Grieve, be mad. Then keep fighting. What kind of Canada do you want to live in?

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