From the CBC:
“Manitobans on disability now
get $25 more a month, but as costs soar, some priced out of basic needs”
(Todd Donohue looks at a can of
tuna in a Winnipeg grocery store. The community advocate who receives
employment and income assistance through the Manitoba government says the
additional $25 he's receiving each month doesn't do enough to bring people on
disability out of severe poverty.)
Todd Donohue walks down the
aisles of a Winnipeg grocery store, anxiously checking price tags and mentally
doing math to ensure his weekly bill doesn't exceed about $4 a day on food. The
community advocate receives disability employment and income assistance. He has
serious Crohn's disease, and lives off of bread, Kraft dinner and heads of
lettuce, although he knows a better diet would help him better manage his
symptoms. As he approaches the meat aisle, he says, “Quite frankly, all of this
is out of my price range. It's just too expensive. If I have a couple of extra
dollars, I might buy a pack of bologna." Donohue and more than 25,000
other Manitobans have started to see their monthly disability assistance
cheques go up by $25. For Donohue, that
means his monthly income went from $1,095 to $1,120 per month. He says the
increase is negligible, because with the high cost of living and his already
low income, $25 won't stretch very far. "Right now we are so far below the
poverty line, we don't even see the poverty line," he said, speaking for
people who are on disability. "You have to pick and choose: Pay a bill or
buy food, pay rent for a roof over your head or pay hydro or buy food.
Everybody is making these choices every month because it's that difficult to
survive."
Manitoba government dishes out
dollars 'to help families make ends meet' This bump in assistance comes
after the province announced an $87-million family affordability package in
August. Of that, about $8 million is going to people who receive Employment and
Income Assistance, or EIA , of which there are 38,619, according to the latest
report from Manitoba Families. General EIA assistance clients without dependent
children will receive an extra $50 per adult each month. Those on disability
assistance will receive $25 per household each month. $2.6M funding will extend
employment services for Manitobans on EIA, province says. Prior to this bump,
disability rates haven't increased in 10 years, according to Make Poverty
History Manitoba. Desiree McIvor, the spokesperson for the coalition, says
people are pleased to have a few extra dollars in their pockets, but agree it's
not nearly enough to keep up with higher prices for everything. "Considering
that the price of groceries have gone up, gas has gone up, everything else is
going up, and to only have an extra [$25] for the people who are the most
vulnerable is a slap in the face," she said.
Disability increase a 'gut
punch'
(Ashley Preece said the bump to
EIA disability was like a "punch to the gut," because it doesn't
cover all of her needs amid the rising cost of living.)
Ashley Preece has been on
disability EIA for seven years after being diagnosed with chronic fatigue
syndrome, a neuroimmune disease. Preece, who uses a wheelchair, receives
discounted Meals on Wheels, but can still only afford them four days of the
week. During the pandemic, the grocery delivery service she relied upon
for additional meals became more expensive, so she had to cut back on food. "I'm
left with mostly canned goods or easy things like cereal," she said. In
August when the province announced the bump in assistance, Preece assumed
people on disability would receive $50, plus an additional $25. "When
I found out that we were receiving less than basic EIA, that was like a punch
in the gut. I felt like people with disabilities are just being ignored."
Families Minister Rochelle Squires says the province is working to address
the basic needs of those living on assistance. On Monday, she announced an
additional measure to help people who receive assistance offset rent. Rent
assist, which is provided as part of regular monthly benefits to EIA clients
renting in the private market, is currently based on 75 per cent of the median
market rent The rate will go up to 77 per cent in January, which the
province says will result in maximum monthly benefits rising between $34 and
$70, depending on the size of the household. "This is in addition to the $50
increase offered [to general assistance EIA clients] making it the largest
increase to EIA in over four decades," she said. Even so, Donohue
says his health problems are sometimes made worse by his inability to afford
nutritious food. "Quite frequently I'm hospitalized just from my
Crohn's disease flaring up because I ate something that I wasn't supposed to
eat, but it was something that I could afford," he said. Donohue
worries if food prices go up much more, he won't be able to afford what he can
now. "In a year's time who knows what the what the prices of food is going
to be and that will shut me out and shut people in my position out of buying
even more healthier foods. It's just going to be horrible."
^ This extra money does seem like
a show rather than an actual help. The Disabled need and deserve more. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/manitoba-income-assistance-disability-1.6635249
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