[homeles_ot-l] Fwd: [c2000-l] 2009 National Report Card on Child POverty
Terrie
mocharebyl at gmail.com
Tue Nov 24 15:01:52 EST 2009
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: MAUND, Jacquie <JacquieMA at familyservicetoronto.org>
Date: 2009/11/24
Subject: [c2000-l] 2009 National Report Card on Child POverty
To: c2000-l at list.web.ca
*Campaign 2000 Partners & Friends –*
Please see below for today’s release of National Report Card.
We’re getting lots of media coverage in print, TV and radio –to get a
flavour click on
http://news.google.ca/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&cf=all&ned=ca&hl=en&q=Child+and+family+poverty+Canada
If you haven’t yet sent our message to your MP… please go to
www.campaign2000.ca
Media Release November 24,
2009
* *
*Poverty Reduction Key to Canada’s Economic Recovery*
* *
*OTTAWA** – *Canada’s economic recovery hinges on federal leadership to pull
recession victims out of the poor house and prevent Canadians from plunging
into deeper poverty, hunger and homelessness, says Campaign 2000’s new
report card on child and family poverty.
*Keep the Promise: Make Canada Poverty-Free *looks at the nation’s most
recent child and family after-tax poverty rate compared to 20 years ago,
when Parliament unanimously resolved to end child poverty by 2000, and finds
today’s after-tax rate is 9.5 per cent, a slight budge from 11.9 per cent in
1989.
“If Canada were a student, she would be in danger of dropping out,” says
Campaign 2000’s Laurel Rothman. “Following an unprecedented period of growth
since 1998, the small change in the rate of child and family poverty is
shocking.
“As Canada develops strategies to foster economic growth and recovery, the
most strategic decision the federal government could make would be to take
leadership and set a target to lower the poverty rate.”
The report card’s key findings, available at www.campaign2000.ca, show
Canada has far to go to prevent and reduce poverty:
· One in 10 children still live in poverty in Canada today. It’s
worse for children living in First Nation’s communities: one in four grow up
in poverty;
· There are more working poor: 40 per cent of low-income children
live in families where at least one parent works full-time year round, up
dramatically from 33 per cent in the 1990s;
· Child poverty is persistent across Canada: rates of child and
family poverty (LICO before-tax) are in the double digits in most provinces.
· The gap between rich and poor has widened: On average, for every
dollar the families in the poorest 10 per cent had, families in the richest
10 per cent had almost 12 times as much ($11.84) in 2007.
“Canada could succeed if our federal government used public policy resources
to improve labour market options and make our tax system more progressive,”
says Ed Broadbent, the former New Democratic Party leader who moved the 1989
motion to end child poverty by the year 2000.
“All Canadians will benefit from less poverty,” says Peggy Taillon,
President of the Canadian Council on Social Development. “As a society we
either share the collective responsibility to prevent child and family
poverty or we face rising costs in health care services, criminal justice
and education.”
“Now that seven out of 10 provinces have committed to poverty reduction,
it’s time for the federal government to exercise leadership and develop a
clear plan with targets and timetables,” says Sid Frankel, Social Planning
Council of Winnipeg.
*…/p. 2*
*Jacquie Maund*
*Coordinator, Ontario Campaign 2000*
*Coordinator, Social Reform, Family Service Toronto*
*Tel 416-595-9230 x241*
*Fax 416-595-0242*
*355 Church St**, Toronto M5B 1Z8*
*jacquiema at familyservicetoronto.org*
*www.campaign2000.ca** *
*www.familyservicetoronto.org*
* *
*Disclaimer*
The information contained in this e-mail communication (and any attachments)
is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient of this email
communication (and any attachments) please delete the e-mail immediately and
notify me at the telephone number shown above or by return e-mail. Please
note that any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of
the author and do not necessarily represent those of the Family Service
Toronto. Neither the sender nor Family Service Toronto accepts liability for
any errors or omissions in the content of this message that arise as a
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liability for any virus that may have been transmitted.
--
Terrie ( mocharebyl at gmail.com )
“If you see an injustice being committed, you aren't an observer, you are a
participant.” June Callwood
Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future and
renders the present inaccessible. Maya Angelou
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