Delays slow B.C. government’s promised poverty reduction plan, says minister
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s promised plan to fight poverty is taking longer to introduce than originally forecast, says the minister in charge of poverty reduction.
Shane Simpson announced plans last year to table legislation this spring that includes targets and timelines to cut poverty, but he said that has now been delayed to the fall.
The director of a Victoria-based anti-poverty group said Thursday the need to fight poverty is immediate and they will be among many watching to ensure the government’s plan includes targets and time lines.
“If the government pushing back to the fall means that the legislation is ultimately much more concrete and actionable, then we would actually say that’s a good thing,” said Doug King, Together Against Poverty Society executive director. “If the government pushes it back and the legislation doesn’t provide us with those resolute bench marks then definitely I would say we’d be pretty disappointed.”
