PC-promised program to keep Islanders out of long-term care coming soon - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:39 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

PC-promised program to keep Islanders out of long-term care coming soon

The caregiver grant program was first promised in the P.E.I. government's 2023 election platform with grants of up to $1,500 per month "to support families who choose to keep their loved ones at home longer instead of going to community care."

The government budgeted $5.2M for the program this year, which so far remains unspent

Close up of senior woman's hands holding a walking stick.
Dennis King's Progressive Conservatives promised the caregiver grant program if elected last spring, but Health Minister Mark McLane said implementing the program was trickier than anticipated. (Ground Picture/Shutterstock)

The P.E.I. government says it is almost ready to launch a delayed home caregiver program that was budgeted for this fiscal year.

The caregiver grant program was first promised in the Progressive Conservatives'2023 election platform with grants of up to $1,500 per month "to support families who choose to keep their loved ones at home longer instead of going to community care."

Premier Dennis King's government carved off $5.2 million for the program in this fiscal year, but Health Minister Mark McLane saiddeveloping the new program was harder than anticipated.

"We'll have a phased approach to this. We can't capture everybody in the first pass that we do in the program. We have to evaluate it too. It impacts long-term careand our health-care system, so it is quite an extensive program," McLanetold CBC News.

"I would say we're 98 per cent of the way there."

McLane saidhe expects between 700 and 900 families will qualify for the first phase of the program. Islanders on the long-term care waitlist will be eligible, because they've already been assessed.

The other group likely to be included is those who are at risk of going in to long-term care unless assistance is provided.

The topic has come up in the house twice in the spring sitting, both from the Liberals and the Greens, who say they are hearing from constituents who were banking on this program rolling out.

Mark McLane stands against a backdrop of P.E.I. and Canadian flags at the provincial legislature.
Last month, McLane told the legislature part of the holdup was a clarification from the CRA on whether the benefits would be taxable. On Wednesday, he told reporters he believes that issue is cleared up. (Rick Gibbs/CBC)

"Many Islanders were quite pleased to hear about this program. Actually, the people that I talked [to] about [it], they voted for this government on that one particular promise," Official Opposition Leader Hal Perry told the house on Wednesday.

"We have an aging population and many family members have to spend a great deal of time looking after loved ones. It often means that their incomes are reduced because of those pressures."

McLane said much of the program had to be created from scratch, since it is one of the first of its kind in the country.

He said they were also waiting on word from the Canada Revenue Agency on whether the benefits would be considered taxable income, but he's now confident that will not be the case.

The minister has also said the plan is to backdate the program to January of this year.

With files from Kerry Campbell