70,000+ Ontario kids seeking publicly-funded autism supports - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:27 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

70,000+ Ontario kids seeking publicly-funded autism supports

Ontario's fiscal watchdog says there are more than 70,000 children seeking support through the Ontario Autism Program, but fewer than 15,000 are getting funding for core therapy.

PC government's budget funding just a few thousand more children for core services compared to 2018 Liberals

Michael Parsa, Ontario Minister for Children, Community and Social Services, speaks to reporters.
Michael Parsa, Ontario Minister for Children, Community and Social Services, speaks to reporters at the Queen's Park Legislature. On Wednesday, the Financial Accountability Office of Ontario said fewer than 15,000 are getting funding for core therapy, despite there being more than 70,000 children seeking support through the Ontario Autism Program. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Ontario's fiscal watchdog says there are more than 70,000 children seeking support through the Ontario Autism Program, but fewer than 15,000 are getting funding for core therapy.

Not all children registered in the program are waiting for core therapy, which funds applied behaviour analysis, speech language pathology, occupational therapy and mental health services, but the Ontario Autism Coalition says most do need those services, at varying levels.

The Progressive Conservative government has more than doubled the budget for the Ontario Autism Program, now at $720 million, but that is funding just a few thousand more children for core services than the program under the former Liberal government in 2018.

According to a previous report from the Financial Accountability Office of Ontario, about 10,365 children were receiving needs-based therapy in 2018-19, but the current government stopped enrolling children into core therapy as it redesigned a new program in 2019.

It was forced to go back to the drawing board when families said its new program would not meet the needs of most childrenand only started enrolling children in its new program in 2022.

Figures obtained by The Canadian Press through a freedom-of-information request show that by the end of March, 14,886 children were receiving funding for core services.