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Ontario’s Government for the People Announces Social Assistance Plan

November 22, 2018

NORTH BAY – Today, MPP Vic Fedeli announced that Ontario’s Government for the People is helping Ontario’s most vulnerable as well as job seekers in Nipissing and across the province through reforms to social assistance.

“Today is the first step in restoring dignity, encouraging employment, and empowering the province’s most vulnerable to break free from a cycle of poverty,” said Fedeli. “Our plan is about a more effective, sustainable approach to helping people prepare to return to work and achieve better outcomes.”

Currently, there are over 240 income support rates and combinations and a web of over 800 rules, making navigating the system confusing and time-consuming for recipients and caseworkers.

Provincial employment services will also see improvements through better, more streamlined supports, placing a greater focus on outcomes and exploring options for more locally responsive outcome driven employment service delivery models. The province will better coordinate Employment Ontario and Social Assistance to make it simpler and easier for all job seekers reach their potential.

“Many people in this province have severe disabilities that make it very difficult to support themselves fully through work alone, and they will be met with compassion and dignity in our new system,” said Fedeli. “Those receiving assistance who can work, will be treated with the same dignity, including targeted support to fill Ontario’s available jobs.”

The government will undertake a coordinated multi-ministry approach to reduce red tape, eliminate unnecessary rules, and support individual action plans to establish self-reliance and ease off the system.

“We will implement these changes in a measured and careful way that minimized disruption for those on the system,” said Fedeli. “We are embracing an all-of-government approach that will provide wraparound support that is customized to the specific needs of individual people.”

Ontario’s plan for social assistance reform is guided by the following priorities:

Moving People to Employment

Reduce administration and paperwork so people receiving Ontario Works and front-line staff can focus on individual action plans that set out a path to health, wellness and preparations to return to work.

Locally Focused Social Services

Streamline social assistance and employment programs and increase local responsiveness and flexibility to help all job seekers reach their potential.

Supporting People with Disabilities with Dignity

Redesign the Ontario Disability Support Program to provide annualized income support with far fewer reporting requirements for Ontarians with severe disabilities.

Cutting Red Tape and Restoring Accountability

Eliminate barriers for people receiving social assistance and for those delivering support by simplifying rates, reducing administration, cutting unnecessary rules, and restoring service accountability through a simplified system to better focus on improving outcomes.

Ontario’s social assistance system has not seen significant changes in over ten years. Changes will be implemented gradually to update the system so it can better meet the needs of those who need it the most. As a first step, the government will work closely with municipalities to develop a plan to phase in changes, giving them flexibility to meet local needs in the context of their local economies, and undertake consultation with First Nations to develop a specific approach for social assistance and employment services on reserve.

The province has also launched a website, Ontario.ca/openforbusiness, to make matching job seekers with businesses easier. Employers can also post job opportunities at employer.jobbank.gc.ca.

QUICK FACTS

 

  • Almost one million Ontarians are on some form of social assistance.
  • Over the past 15 years the number of Ontarians forced to go on social assistance has skyrocketed by 55 per cent.
  • Ontario has proposed the Low-Income Individuals and Families Tax Credit (LIFT) to help more low income workers keep more of what they earn.
  • Under the status quo only one per cent of people on social assistance re—enter the work force in a given month.
  • Half of the people who get off Ontario Works return; four out of five are back on it within a year

 


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