A few hundred people gathered in Lindsay’s Victoria Park on Tuesday to send a message back to Queen’s Park: don’t cancel the basic income pilot program.
The protesters were angry at Premier Doug Ford for cutting the project two years early.
More than 2,000 residents in the City of Kawartha Lakes were in the program. They received approximately $1,400 per month.
REALITY CHECK: Does social assistance disincentivize people from working?
“I don’t know how else to put it, and excuse my language, by I think this is a really sh*tty thing that the government has done,” said Andy Letham, mayor of the City of Kawartha Lakes.
Get breaking National news
Up until its cancellation, the pilot was being run in Hamilton, Brantford, Brant County, Thunder Bay, the Municipality of Oliver Paipoonge, Township of Shuniah, Municipality of Neebing, Township of Conmee, Township of O’Connor, Township of Gillies and Lindsay.
- Alberta referendum ‘can have an effect’ on investor confidence, Carney says
- Liberal MP sorry after confusion over remarks on forced labour in China
- Another oil pipeline through B.C. sees renewed interest as Enbridge CEO weighs in
- Fix up or fork out: Edmonton to hike taxes on neglected business properties
READ MORE: B.C. government promises more study on ‘basic income’
To qualify, you had to be living on a low income (under $34,000 per year if you’re single or under $48,000 per year if a couple).
“The project has made this about Lindsay and Kawartha Lakes, so today we stand up, if we’re able to, and stand together,” said Mike Perry, executive of the local family health team.
“We can have buck-a-beer, but we can’t have viable social policy?” asked Roderick Benns, publisher of the Lindsay Advocate. “It’s something that gives people a hand up and gives people hope.”
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.