Wait times on B.C.'s welfare phone line soar to almost one hour - Action News
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British Columbia

Wait times on B.C.'s welfare phone line soar to almost one hour

B.C.'s welfare recipients are increasingly living their lives on hold, according to data showing the average phone wait time for social assistance has jumped to nearly an hour.

Anti-poverty activists say people receiving social assistance are living their lives on hold

Despite more staff, wait times for the social assistance phone line at the Ministry of Social Development and Social Innovation remain at between 34 to 58 minutes long. (The Canadian Press)

B.C.'s welfare recipients are increasingly living their lives on hold, according to data which shows the average phone wait time for social assistance has jumped to nearly an hour.

Documents, released under the Freedom of Information Actshow wait times for the Ministry of Social Development and Social Innovation's automated telephone inquirylineshot up to nearly 58 minutes last August and averaged53 minutes the following month.

"That's incredible," said Trish Garner, an organizer with B.C. Poverty Reduction.

"It's really shocking. The reality of living at these deeply inadequate levels of income is really about waiting: waiting in line for food, for shelter, and now about waiting in line for a government service that should be there for people."

Wait times had already tripled

Wait times were initially flagged as an issue last year, when statistics revealed the average wait time for the ministry's phoneline tripled in 2014 from nine minutes to 34.

The latest figures came after an FOI request fromB.C. Public Interest Advocacy Centre.

Garner saysmany people on social assistance don't have cell phones and are forced to use public phones at community agencies which may have time limits and wait lines of their own.

And those who do have cell phones often have pay-as-you-go plans.

Fraser Stuart, a Downtown Eastside resident and volunteer with the Carnegie Community Action Project, says the climbing wait times are part of a much larger issuein terms of accessing services.

"And it's the only way that you can get through tothe welfare office; you can't go there anymore, you have to call in," he said.

"There's outrage and frustration. They're making the system so hard that people get frustrated and they give up."

Garner says allowing the wait times to build effectively tells welfare recipientstheir time isn't valuable.

Ministry strives for less than 10 minutes

The ministry says the call centre receives 130,000 calls a month and wait times have increased in part because of inquiries about changes which support people on assistance.

In an emailed statement, a ministry spokesperson said 70 per cent of customers are now choosing a call back option which won't use up their cell phone minutes:"Telephone service has become popular with the people we serve."

The call centre is also in the process of hiring 40 more people, which will increase staff on the toll free line by 27 per cent.

The ministry says it strives to have wait lines which are less than 10 minutes.