Manitoba needs plan to cut child poverty rates in half by 2027: report - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba needs plan to cut child poverty rates in half by 2027: report

A new report on child and family poverty in Manitoba says the province needs to commit to "a bold target" of reducing child poverty rates by 50 per cent within the next three years.

Manitoba has highest child poverty rates among provinces, says new report

A young boy sits against a brick wall, his dead down on his folded knees, a blue backpack beside him.
A new report says Manitoba needs to make commitments to address its child poverty rate, which is the highest among Canadian provinces. (Roman Bodnarchuk/Shutterstock)

A new report on child and family poverty in Manitoba says the province needs to commit to "a bold target" of reducing child poverty rates by 50 per cent within the next three years.

That's one of the recommendations in a new report released Tuesday by theManitoba chapter of Campaign 2000 a national anti-poverty campaign.

"Year after year, it can be very depressing to do this report," said Kate Kehler,the executive director of the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg, which contributed to the report.

The Campaign 2000 coalitiontracks the federal government's progress on a 1989 promise toend child poverty by the year 2000.

The new report, titled "35 Years In: Manitoba Needs an Anti-Poverty Strategy that Works," provides an overview onchild poverty in the province and makes recommendations for addressing the issue.

Manitoba has the highestchild poverty rate among all Canadian provinces, at 27per cent, the report says well above the national average of 18 per cent, based on 2022 Statistics Canada data.

"There's lots of different levers that different levels of government can pull in order to fix this, but they have to have a goal," Kehler said at a news conference in Winnipeg, where the report was released Tuesday.

A woman speaks into a microphone following a press conference in a spacious room with a staircase behind her.
Social Planning Council executive director Kate Kehler says the provincial government needs to redirect money from tax breaks for middle- and high-income earners to focus on lifting families out of poverty. (Megan Goddard/Radio-Canada)

For example, Kehler pointed to spending on the"affordability package" rolled out by the previous Progressive Conservative government whichsent benefit cheques to Manitobafamilies with children and a household income of less than $175,000 and the current NDP government'sgas tax holidayas money that could be redirected to helping lift families out of poverty.

"There is money," said Kehler, including more than $6.8 billion in federal transfers and equalization paymentsfor 2024-25.

"Instead of using those for tax breaks for middle- and high-income folks, let's make sure that we're bringing people out of poverty."

Guarantee income for kids aging out of care: report

The report makes fivefive immediate recommendations for addressing child poverty, including committing toa 50 per cent reduction in child and family poverty from the 2022 level by 2027.

Another recommendation is to create a guaranteed basic incomeprogram for people aging out of Child and Family Services and fund more community-based programs in schools to help children learn.

The report alsocalls on the province to ensure support for changes to legislation passed earlier this year to ensure people on employment and income assistance canpursue adult basic education and still receive benefits.

A person sits holding a report in their lap.
The new report, released Tuesday, recommends five immediate steps to reduce child poverty rates, including a provincial commitment to a 50 per cent reduction in child and family poverty from the 2022 level by 2027. (Megan Goddard/Radio-Canada)

As well, the report makeslong-term recommendations that touch on a range of issues, including ensuring the minimum wage is a "living wage" and calling for all family and child benefit programs to be indexed to inflation.

It also makes health-related recommendations, such as fully implementing Jordan's Principle, which saysFirst Nations children should get prompt access to essential health care, with questions about which jurisdiction pays for them worked out afterward.

On housing, the report calls for5,000 social housing units to be added over five years, with rents set at social assistance levels or capped at 30 per centof household income.

Kehler said the province has promised apoverty reduction strategy "focusing on children, and youth aging out of care and seniors, and so we're really hoping that with our recommendations that are very much targeted to those groups, that we'll see some progress in those areas."

Working on poverty reduction: minister

Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine said the province takes the report's findings seriously, and pointed to efforts her government has made, such as a recently announcedschool nutrition program.

"Almost immediately since I became minister, we've engaged in a revision and a revamping of the poverty reduction strategy of Manitoba," Fontaine said, adding that strategywill be unveiled in the near future, and will havea focus on marginalized children.

The report also says the percentage of Manitoba children living in households facing food insecurity went up from about 26 per cent in 2022 to nearly 33per cent last year.

University of Manitoba food and human nutritional sciences professor Natalie Riediger said she expects that number will be even worse for 2024.

"Food prices have continued to either go up or stay the same and we've seen little policy response in terms of improving income supports, which we know are the most effective ways to reduce food insecurity," she said.

Mary Burton, executive director of Zoongizi Ode, formerlyknown as Fearless R2W, said fewer children would be living in poverty if the province increased minimum wage to a living wage and boosted employment income assistance benefits for families.

"I myself am a grandmother. I am raising three of my grandchildren and working two jobs, and I still struggle month-to-month to make ends meet, so that's how real poverty is," she said.

"I work with a lot of people who are on social assistance, and they're fighting to get their kids back or they're fighting to keep their kids or they're just fighting, period, to make ends meet."

With files from Victor Lhoest