B.C.'s child poverty rate still Canada's highest
But rate has been dropping since 1991, says minister
Last Updated: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 | 11:56 AM PT
The Canadian Press
Related
Internal Links
- B.C. minister defends poverty strategy
- B.C. Children's Ministry report reveals 'chaos,' NDP says
- B.C.'s child protection system still broken: children's watchdog
- B.C. the worst in Canada for child poverty
- B.C.'s child poverty rate worst in Canada: report
- Prosperous B.C. has grim child-poverty record: group
- Little change in child poverty rates
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Customers in need of extra food line up at the Surrey Food Bank. (CBC)British Columbia's child poverty rate has remained the highest in Canada for six years in a row and it's time the provincial government took action, according to a child and youth advocacy group.
In its annual Child Poverty Report Card released Tuesday, the advocacy group First Call said B.C. had 156,000 poor children in 2007 — even though that was a good year for the provincial economy.
"When will the provincial government take action?" asked First Call chairwoman Julie Norton, who released the report on the 20th anniversary of an unanimous House of Commons vote to end child poverty in Canada by 2000.
'We are seeing dramatic declines in child poverty in British Columbia,'—B.C. Children and Family Development Minister Mary Polak
The proportion of children living in poverty in B.C. was 18.8 per cent, while the national child poverty rate was 15 per cent, according to Statistics Canada data cited in the report.
"We've been at the bottom year after year after year, and our elected officials still don't take seriously the pain and suffering that poverty causes children and their families," said Norton.
And while B.C. had fewer children living in poverty in 2007 than it had in 2006, the group pointed out that the province has since seen an economic downturn, along with the rest of the world.
"Yet half a dozen other provinces — Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba — have committed to poverty reduction plans," said Norton.
The B.C. government must come up with a legislated poverty-reduction plan that includes the appointment of a cabinet minister committed to the cause, she said.
Call for action disputed
The report calls on the province to increase child benefits and access to high quality childcare while raising welfare rates and B.C.'s minimum wage, the lowest of all provinces at $8 an hour.
But B.C. Children and Family Development Minister Mary Polak said those measures would not have a huge impact on the child poverty rates.
"The stats don't back it up. The vast majority of people according to Statistics Canada who are earning minimum wage in British Columbia are under the age of 25 and most of those live at home with their parents," Polak said.
Polak also noted the report also confirms the child poverty rate in B.C. has been consistently dropping since 1991.
"We have the lowest child poverty rate in British Columbia that we have seen in almost the last 20 years," Polak said.
"We know we have to keep on top of what things are changing our world right now, but nevertheless we know that the kind of interventions we have been using are working, because we are seeing the outcomes," she said.
"We are seeing dramatic declines in child poverty in British Columbia. And this report concedes the same thing — the number of children living in poverty has decreased by 25,000," said Polak.
Poverty affects health
First Call did report 25,000 fewer B.C. children were living in poverty in 2007, compared to its 2006 study, but the group's provincial co-ordinator, Adrienne Montani, said those figures should be viewed cautiously.
"I just would remind the minister that that was during very good economic times," she said.
The report cites health experts in the BC Healthy Living Alliance saying that child poverty has a huge impact on health.
"The lack of resources and choices as well as social exclusion and stress created by poverty make it one of the most significant contributors to ill health," said the report.
And while the risk of poverty is more than three times greater for families with only a single female parent, 51 per cent of poor children live in two-parent families, the report said.
First Call is a coalition of healthcare, social service, education and justice groups formed in 1992 to advocate for the rights of children in B.C.
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- New Westminster man saves woman from house fire
- A New Westminster, B.C., man is being called a hero after rescuing a woman from the balcony of a burning home early Sunday morning. more »
- Adults-only trade show cancelled in B.C. Bible belt
- Organizers of an adults-only trade show say they're cancelling a three-day event that was scheduled to take place in British Columbia's Bible belt. more »
- Canada fails to advance to Davis Cup quarters
- Canada failed to advance to the Davis Cup quarter-finals Sunday as France's Jo-Wilfried Tsonga beat surprise substitute Frank Dancevic in straight sets in Vancouver. more »
- B.C. vets call for ban on dog docking, cropping
- B.C. veterinarians are calling on the province to ban the docking and cropping of dogs' tails and ears, saying it causes unnecessary pain. more »
Top News Headlines
- Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting
- Greek lawmakers have approved harsh new austerity measures demanded by bailout creditors to save the debt-crippled nation from bankruptcy, after riots in Athens and other cities left stores looted and burned and more than 120 people hurt. more »
- Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters
- A small Quebec town is in mourning Sunday after a Quebec man was charged with killing his nieces and his mother, who were found dead in their family home. more »
- Houston autopsy results withheld by police
- Whitney Houston was found in a hotel bathtub but it'll take weeks to determine precisely how she died, a Los Angeles coroner's official says. more »
- Musicians who died before their time
- The growing list of musicians who have died young. more »
- Adults-only trade show cancelled in B.C. Bible belt
- Pickton investigators defended by man who warned of killer
- Crane drops section of Port Mann bridge into B.C. river
- Langley man struck, killed by train
- B.C. vets call for ban on dog docking, cropping
- Emailed rave rape pictures earn teen probation
- RCMP request retraction over 'slanderous' article
- Allergy alert issued for Sweets From The Earth
- New Westminster man saves woman from house fire

