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Letter: More on Moore’s poor response

Re: “Poverty the primary factor of illness,” Feb. 5.

To the editor:

Re: “Poverty the primary factor of illness,” Feb. 5.

When MP James Moore asked a Vancouver reporter whether governments have an obligation to ensure kids don’t go to school hungry, his comments were rightly criticized by Canadians across the country as callous and cruel.

B.C.’s child poverty rate is once again the worst in the country – one out of every five children in B.C. is living in poverty. That’s 153,000 kids – enough to fill the stands at a Canucks’ game eight times over. First Nations, immigrant, and racialized families, as well as families with children with disabilities, tend to be especially poor. Astoundingly, half of all children living in families headed by single mothers are poor, living an average of $9,000 below the poverty line.

Poverty among single mother-headed families arises from a number of factors, not least of which is the difficulty single moms face finding quality, affordable child care that allows them to sustain employment.

One policy that actively undermines parents’ ability to support their children is the claw back of child support payments. When a single parent on social assistance receives child support from the child’s other parent, the government takes that money away from the child, clawing back the entire amount from the family’s social assistance cheque.

Social assistance rates in B.C. are already incredibly low and haven’t risen since 2007, despite the rising cost of living.

Vast amounts of research demonstrate the toxic role poverty plays in undermining healthy childhood development, as well as the huge additional costs in health care, education, the justice system and lost productivity we are already paying by allowing poverty rates to remain so high.

Fortunately, most British Columbians don’t share Mr. Moore’s dismissive view. 87 per cent  of British Columbians think the Premier and Prime Minister should set concrete targets and timelines for reducing poverty.

Trish Garner,
Vancouver

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