Toronto Star

Don’t make the most vulnerable wait

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It’s hard not to be cynical about the announceme­nt this week that Ottawa intends to conduct a public consultati­on on its anti-poverty strategy, delaying action until at least the fall.

With the federal budget likely just weeks away, the news doesn’t bode well for the prospect of immediate relief for those most in need.

That would be a shame. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s commitment to developing an anti-poverty strategy is welcome after a decade of federal retrenchme­nt, and a public consultati­on could no doubt improve his government’s approach.

But there are several measures the government can take that could quickly and profoundly improve the lives of the one in seven Canadians living in poverty. On these, there’s no reason to wait.

Fix Employment Insurance The Liberals came to power promising to fix Canada’s broken EI system, which hasn’t received a significan­t overhaul since 1996.

After a decade of erosion, only about 40 per cent of unemployed Canadians now have access to employment insurance, a lower proportion than at any time since the Second World War. Among other issues, the program was designed for an era when steady jobs were the norm. The growing ranks of precarious workers often don’t spend long enough in short-term jobs to qualify for benefits or training.

EI exists to ensure people in temporary trouble don’t fall permanentl­y out of the labour market and become forever dependent on welfare. It’s in everyone’s best interest that the program work well.

But while Trudeau introduced modest tweaks to the system in his first budget, much more must be done to ensure EI reflects the shifting reality of work and is adequate to the current cost of living.

The issue has been on the Liberals’ agenda for years, and experts have long advocated specific policy fixes, such as new fair and universal criteria for access and a ban on government­s’ raiding EI reserves. Ottawa shouldn’t have to spend months consulting before it eases the burden on the unemployed.

This tendency to consult rather than act is particular­ly worrying in the case of the government’s promised anti-poverty strategy

Invest in affordable housing The same is true of paying for affordable housing and the supports necessary to end homelessne­ss.

After decades of federal retreat in this area, the Trudeau government vowed to do better. It undertook a four-month public consultati­on on a national housing strategy and published its findings last fall, including that Canadians want government to significan­tly boost affordable housing stock and end homelessne­ss, set clear targets for doing so and publicly measure progress.

In Ontario alone, the social housing wait-list is longer and slowermovi­ng than ever before. Some 170,000 households are currently waiting for units, with the average wait time at around four years.

Urgent action is needed, as the government acknowledg­es. Surely those who need adequate shelter shouldn’t have to wait for the results of yet another months-long consultati­on.

Do more for parents The Trudeau government’s hallmark social policy, the expanded Canada Child Benefit, will lift thousands of children out of poverty. But it could be better.

The program won’t be indexed to inflation until 2020, thus providing less than seemed to have been promised. That should be remedied.

Moreover, the daycare situation remains dire. Licenced spots exist for just 22 per cent of children under 5.

In Toronto alone, almost 12,000 eligible children are in the queue for subsidized spaces.

This situation robs too many people, particular­ly mothers, of the opportunit­y to work or train.

Study after study has shown that a universal, quality, affordable child-care system would do much to alleviate poverty, as well as promote economic growth. The evidence is in; it’s time to act.

Improve protection­s for people with disabiliti­es The federal government offers people living with a severe mental or physical disability a tax credit worth up to nearly $2,000 a year. However, many people with disabiliti­es are on welfare or welfare-like programs or work at very low-income jobs and thus don’t pay much income tax, if any. The result is that those most in need receive no benefit.

There’s a fix for this. Disability advocates have long argued for what’s called a refundable version of the credit; that is, one that provides either a break on your taxes, or if your taxes are so low that you don’t qualify, a cash grant at the end of the year.

This would be a far more effective tool for helping those with disabiliti­es who need it the most. The Caledon Institute, the thinktank that designed the model for the Canada Child Benefit, published a paper in 2015 that sets out a detailed road map on how to design and implement such reform. Ottawa should follow it.

The Trudeau government’s embrace of democratic consultati­on is a welcome shift after a decade of something like government-by-fiat. But these consultati­ons must not be used as smokescree­ns to distract from inaction.

At what point does consultati­on erode rather than build trust? Take just a few of the Liberal campaign promises still undelivere­d ostensibly because they are in some stage of consultati­on or review: rolling back the most egregious aspects of the Tories’ overreachi­ng security policy; closing regressive tax loopholes that benefit the richest few at a great cost to the public purse; fixing the outdated access-to-informatio­n law to ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

How much consultati­on is needed before the government is ready to do as it promised?

This tendency to consult rather than act — to signal a commitment without delivering the substance and paying the cost — is particular­ly worrying in the case of the government’s promised anti-poverty strategy.

If Ottawa wants to consult as it develops a holistic approach to poverty, great. But precarious workers without employment insurance, the hundreds of thousands of households waiting for social housing, the parents, primarily mothers, who can afford neither to work nor not to, those who have faced particular hardship by virtue of their disabiliti­es — we know how to help these people. They shouldn’t be asked to keep waiting.

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