The 2030 Project: Tune in to season 3
Daily Bread Food Bank
Ending hunger in our city. We collaborate with all to eliminate food insecurity, and advocate solutions to end poverty.
After three years of consultations, legislative crafting, committee reviews and political pushing and pulling in the House of Commons and in the senate in Ottawa, the?Canada Disability Benefit Act finally received royal assent on June 21, 2023. It’s intended to raise those living with disabilities in Canada out of poverty. But can it? Will it???
Join us for Season 3 of The 2030 Project podcast, a special mini-series dedicated to the new Canada Disability Benefit. Close to half of food bank clients in Toronto are living with a disability. Will the Canada Disability Benefit be enough to reduce or even eliminate poverty among people with disabilities? Tune in to find out.?
Learn more about the new season of The 2030 Project, by checking out our episode?highlights: ?
Episode 1: A new dawn?
In this season premiere, we start the series off with a brief chat with Neil Hetherington, CEO and Talia Bronstein, Vice President of Research & Advocacy from the Daily Bread Food Bank, as they discuss what they’re looking to see in this new income program.?
Episode 2: Nothing about us without us?
With the passage of Bill C-22, the?Canada Disability Benefit Act,?advocates and activists across the country are at the frontlines pushing the federal government to make good on its promise of co-design regarding the development of regulations.?In this episode, we are joined by Rabia Khedr, National Director of Disability Without Poverty (DWP) and CEO of DEEN Support Services; Neil Belanger, CEO, Indigenous Disability Canada (IDC) and the British Columbia Aboriginal Network on Disability Society (BCANDS); and Amanda MacKenzie, National Director of Public Affairs, March of Dimes Canada.?People with disabilities are experts on their own lives, and the disability community continues to push for inclusion in co-design beyond mere consultations. They explore best practices for engaging with people with disabilities and how to engage with Indigenous communities, who have been failed by government many times.?
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Episode 3: Who gets it???
As the federal government begins to develop the Canada Disability Benefit,?the question of who’s eligible, and how will they qualify for this program come to the forefront.?Who determines the eligibility of this program? How will the federal government work alongside?provincial and territorial governments?and private insurance companies to ensure those who need it actually, receive it??How does it account for the diversity in language and cultures across the country? How is disability defined and will it include those with episodic and/or invisible disabilities??In this episode, we are joined by Trevor Manson, Secretary Co-Chair, ODSP Action Coalition and Michelle Hewitt, Chair of the Board, Disability Without Poverty (DWP), who take us on a trip from Ontario to BC and back, as advocates continue to push for inclusion for all people with disabilities.?
Episode 4: How do you get it???
We now turn to accessibility, and explore how the government can ensure that application and appeals processes are accessible to all people with disabilities. Should it be automatic qualification by proxy if someone is already receiving other disability benefits? What are the downsides to using the tax system to roll out the benefit? What should the appeals process look like if someone is denied the benefit? In this episode, we talk to Ron Anicich, Member, ODSP Action Coalition and an ODSP Recipient, Sarah Kennell, National Director of Public, Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA); and Jonathan Lai, Executive Director, Autism Alliance. Together we discuss how to define equal and meaningful accessibility of the Canada Disability Benefit from coast to?coast.??
Episode 5: Is it enough???
A key objective of the Canada Disability Benefit is to reduce, and potentially, eliminate poverty among people with disabilities while ensuring that people are not left worse off than they were before. This means that the amount of the benefit needs to be adequate to lift people with disabilities out of poverty, which raises the billion-dollar question: how much money is needed to eliminate poverty among people with disabilities??Should everyone get the same benefit, or should it reflect living expenses and specific disability related needs? How can we ensure that private insurers and provinces don’t claw back the benefits? In this episode, we are joined by Andrea Hatala, Recipient Co-Chair, ODSP Action Coalition; Bill Adair, Executive Director, Spinal Cord Injury Canada; and Adrian Merdzan, Staff Lawyer, Income Security Advocacy Centre (ISAC). ??
Ready to tune in? Listen on Spotify , ?Apple Podcasts ?or wherever you get your podcasts.?
Founder & Director of The Lemon Tree House Artist's Residency, Artist, Writer, Childcare professional and All-Around Renaissance Woman
1 年Universal basic income for all would be so very welcome. And of course a living wage for everyone at this stage of the game is a no-brainer. That we have yet to move in these ways is somewhat shocking. Thank you Daily Bread Food Bank for the thoughtful post and call for dignity for all persons and for initiating a food drive at an important time of year this weekend. Looking forward to seeing what the neighbourhood's generosity translates to next weekend when the red bags are picked up. I hope they will all be bursting with food for those in need.