Toronto Star

Schreiner says Greens aim to phase in basic income

- ROBERT BENZIE

A Green government would declare war on poverty by doubling welfare and disability benefits if elected June 2.

Green Leader Mike Schreiner unveiled the party’s fully costed campaign platform Thursday with some ambitious goals to help Ontario’s most vulnerable people.

Schreiner said his party would “phase in a basic income with the first step being to double Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) and Ontario Works (OW) rates and reduce aggressive clawbacks” to assist the needy.

“Poverty is crushing in this province right now. We have literally legislated poverty,” he told a meeting of the Star editorial board Thursday.

To help tackle the problem, the Greens would spend some $20 billion on increasing ODSP and OW payments, which would be eventually tied to inflation.

In a surprise move on Monday, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford said he would raise ODSP rates by five per cent — even though that $425-million promise was not accounted for in Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfal­vy’s April 28 budget.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath would immediatel­y boost OW and ODSP rates by 20 per cent and has said she would “legislate that raises must, at minimum, be indexed to inflation.”

Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca said if he wins, ODSP and OW benefits would increase by 10 per cent on July 1 and another 10 per cent one year later before levelling off at two per cent hikes annually as of 2024.

Like Schreiner, both Horwath and Del Duca have vowed to resurrect Ontario’s basic income pilot project that Ford scrapped in 2018 in spite of a campaign promise that year to keep it.

The Green platform also makes a slew of environmen­tal pledges, including “cash incentives up to $10,000 for buying a fully electric vehicle and $1,000 for an e-bike or used electric vehicle.”

Schreiner said it makes economic sense to subsidize electric cars and bikes.

“It cost me about $5 to charge my electric vehicle (overnight) and … $10 to $15 to charge it at a highspeed charger,” he said. “Meanwhile, people are spending hundreds of dollars or more, filling their cars up with gasoline.”

In his meeting with the Star, the Green leader was candid about what victory would look like for his party.

“I’d love to form government because I think, of the four leaders on offer, I’d make the best premier,” said Schreiner.

“But I also am pretty honest with folks that it’s highly unlikely we will go from one seat to forming government,” he said.

“So, for us, our objective is to bring a caucus of Greens to Queen’s Park — I think realistica­lly that is likely somewhere between maybe one to three to four seats.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Leader Mike Schreiner unveiled the Greens’ costed platform on Thursday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Leader Mike Schreiner unveiled the Greens’ costed platform on Thursday.

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