Poverty Reduction Actions and Initiatives
Since the Poverty Reduction Strategy was announced on April 3, 2009, great strides have been made towards each of its four main goals. Click a headline to see details:
Focus on Children and Families
2012-2013
- Effective July 1, 2012, families will see an increase of 5% in the Nova Scotia Child Benefit, helping 24,000 families and almost twice as many children.
2011-2012
- Effective July 1, 2011, the Affordable Living Tax Credit will be indexed to keep pace with inflation; approximately 240,000 Nova Scotians will benefit.
- Effective July 1, 2011, the Nova Scotia Child Benefit will be increased by over 20% per month for about 40,000 Nova Scotian children.
- Effective July 1, 2011, Foster Care rates will increase, for the second consecutive year, by 11%, to help 825 foster families better provide for 1,149 children.
- April 1, 2011, 250 new child care subsidies were introduced to help make child care more accessible for struggling families.
- Effective December, 2011, new income guidelines for the Direct Family Support for Children program will be implemented to improve access for lower to modest income families.
- Effective July, 1, 2011 support for families with children transitioning from Direct Family Support to adulthood will be introduced to help with costs between 18 and 19 years.
2010-2011
- Changed co-habitation policy within income assistance to enable families to form stable relationships without losing support.
- Shelter benefits within income assistance no longer reduced when a youth turns 19 if the youth is a college or university student living at home.
- Invested $70M in Affordable Living Tax Credit, benefitting more than 225,000 households.
- Removed provincial portion of HST on children’s shoes, clothing and diapers.
- Created 600 additional child care subsidies and 920 child care spaces.
- Increased Foster Care rates by more than 10%.
- Expanded the household income thresholds for housing repair programs and increased the maximum amount of assistance available under the provincial housing repair programs from $5,000 to $6,500.
- Expanded the Mobile Mental Health Crisis Team’s coverage to include all of HRM.
- Reduced wait times for the Child Mental Health program
- Announced NS Mental Health & Addictions Strategy
- 400 parents attended Parents as Career Coaches (PACC) in 20 schools.
- Continued funding for targeted programs for the Aboriginal and African-Nova Scotia communities.
- Supported children and parents with 20 family literacy programs across the province through the Family Learning Initiative Endowment fund of the Halifax Youth foundation.
2009-2010
- Created 150 new child care subsidies and funded the creation of an additional 280 child care spaces.
- Provided funding for the literacy improvement initiative ($1,400,000), for literacy mentors ($1,545,000), and for math mentors/PD ($2,102,000).
- Invested $221,650 to support the expansion of co-op education in 32 schools
- Increased the income thresholds for the NS Child Benefit and Low Income Pharmacare for Children (LIPC) from $16,000 - $21,000 to $18,000 - $23,000 -- making 7,500 more children eligible for NSCB and LIPC.
Enable and Reward Work
2012-2013
- Investing $863,000 in enhanced employment support services to help more people on IA access training and find and keep a job.
2011-2012
- Effective July 1, 2011, the Income Assistance Wage Exemption policy will provide a flat rate exemption of $150 per month in addition to the current exemption of 30%;
- Effective July 1, 2011, the flat rate exemption for those working in supported employment within income assistance will double - from $150 to $300 per month
- Effective Spring 2011, amendments to the Labour Standards Code will improve protections for temporary foreign workers, assisting particularly vulnerable, lower waged workers.
- Effective October 1, 2011, the Minimum Wage in Nova Scotia will increase to $10 an hour.
- Basic personal income tax exemption increased by $250.
- The three-year, $7.5 million pilot program Skills Up! is estimated to reach over 300 African Nova Scotians returning to school under the LMA to get the training needed for good jobs.
2010-2011
- Launched Target 100, in partnership with the Co-op Council of Nova Scotia, and connected 21 Community Services’ clients with jobs.
- Expanded One Journey programming for income assistant participants across the province, spending $1.2M in LMA funds.
- Expanded partnerships with employers to support 300 Nova Scotians move from learning to employment in trucking, healthcare, and tourism.
- Invested $405,000 to support the Link Continuing Care Assistant Program within the Nova Scotia School of Adult Learning.
- Expanded number of Nova Scotia high schools offering co-operative education to 84; up from 15 in 2005.
- Increased Minimum Wage to $9.65, making it one of the highest in the country
- 2,500 IA households had additional income of $676,345 from income tax refunds
- Invested more than $400,000 through the Nova Scotia School of Adult Learning, resulting in 100 new Continuing Care Assistants certified and working
- Helped over 800 people who experienced job loss transiton to new opportunities and employment through the provision of targeted skills upgrading and employment services.
2009-2010
- Income tax refunds received by income assistance recipients no longer treated as income.
- Increased Minimum Wage to $8.60 per hour.
Improve Support for those Most in Need
2012-2013
- For the second year in a row the Income Assistance Personal Allowance is going up. Effective July 1, 2012 it will increase by $9. This comes on top of last year’s $15 increase, the largest boost people on IA had seen in a decade.
- Increasing funding to two programs that allow persons with disabilities to live more independently. Funding to the Independent Living and Alternative Family Support programs is going up by $900,000.
2011-2012
- Effective July 1, 2011, the Income Assistance Personal Allowance will increase by $15 per month for about 31,000 adults receiving income assistance.
- Effective July 1, 2011, the Poverty Reduction Credit will increase to keep pace with inflation; benefiting about 13,000 income assistance recipients.
- The Independent Living and Alternative Family Support programs are expanding to enable 50 additional persons with disabilities to live as independently as possible
- Day programs for disabled individuals are expanding to provide better access.
- Allocated $1.8 million to expand the Caregiver Benefit Program, helping seniors to remain at home in the communities they helped to build, and helping more than 1,000 caregivers.
2010-2011
- Doubled the allowable cash asset levels within the income assistance program; available to all recipients of income assistance.
- Fair drug prices are expected to lower the cost of the Pharmacare programs for taxpayers; families and seniors enrolled in Pharmacare programs will pay less for prescriptions.
- Increased coverage for eye examinations for households in receipt of income assistance.
- Invested $50M to create new affordable homes for hundreds of Nova Scotians and to renovate and repair thousands of units
- Put an extra $200 per year in the pockets of approximately 15,000 IA recipients through the new Poverty Reduction Credit
- Removed security deposits for seniors moving into nursing homes
- Provided funding to the Mobile Outreach Street Health program in Capital Health District.
- 18,000 low-income seniors receiving GIS paid $12.5M less in provincial taxes.
- Opened Mental Health Court in November 2009.
2009-2010
- Increased Seniors’ Property Tax Rebate by $200 per year to $600, benefiting more than 14,500 seniors.
- Expanded the Direct Family Support program to enable 100 additional persons with disabilities to live as independently as possible.
- Under the Economic Action Plan housing funds, committed $34 million in the existing public housing stock. The commitments included funds for energy upgrades and repairs and adaptations to help seniors to continue to live independently.
- Increased personal use allowance for income assistance recipients in October 2009 by 3%.
Collaborate and Coordinate
2011-2012
- Investing $1M to support communities to work in partnership to address local issues like homelessness.
- Developing a resource guide for low-income Nova Scotians for easier access to programs and services
- Participating in the Council of Atlantic Ministers of Education and Training (CAMET) Literacy Awareness Campaign.
- Reviewing the Job Bank in Nova Scotia- a free job posting service for all employers and job seekers in the province- including a job-matching mechanism.
- Further development of robust annual accountability measures and reporting regimes currently contained in Federal-Provincial agreements to help improve programs for unemployed Nova Scotians.
- Developing a labour market information strategy that will contribute to a better understanding and response to the labour market needs of underrepresented groups in Nova Scotia. 2010-2011
- Provided funding to the Nova Scotia Food Security Network to research the cost of a basic, nutritious diet
- Consulting to lower the cost of prescription drugs
- Creating a provincial housing strategy; advocating for continued federal housing support
- Participating in the federal-provincial/territorial advisory committees on poverty reduction, disabilities, and children at risk.
- Participated and invested in a provincial conference which brought together key stakeholders from government, community, and business to identify collaborative approaches to reducing poverty.
2009-2010
- Ministerial Committee for Poverty Reduction established.
- Established position of poverty reduction coordinator.
- Launched Target100, a program that connects Community Services’ clients with jobs, in partnership with the Co-op Council of NS.
