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Saturday, December 19, 2015

Community-Based Solutions Represent Our Best Chance To Beat Poverty | PopularResistance.Org

Community-Based Solutions Represent Our Best Chance To Beat Poverty | PopularResistance.Org:

Community-Based Solutions Represent Our Best Chance To Beat Poverty

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Poverty reduction has no silver bullet. Nor should we expect one. The exhausting and overwhelming work of reducing poverty must take a comprehensive, long-term approach that is led by the communities in need.  These communities, who struggle against poverty and social exclusion every day, have repeatedly said this work requires more than a simple transfer of money.
Last month, an editorial by the Winnipeg Free Press reflected on a recently published a report that highlighted Manitoba’s persistent and disheartening poverty rates. The article criticizes the provincial government for  “shipping tax dollars to a variety of community groups and organizations,” implying this is a “political goal” and comes at the expense of broader poverty reduction efforts (such as raising minimum wage or increasing social assistance rates). This is a misguided idea that does not appreciate the critical role of locally managed front-line services in poverty reduction.
To be clear, significant poverty reduction will require a substantial increase in social assistance rates, as well as a higher minimum wage. $15.53 per hour is the wage necessary for a fully employed single mother to raise her child at the poverty line. These are the recommendations put forward by the report highlighted in the Winnipeg Free Press editorial, and these recommendations are championed by Make Poverty History Manitoba, along with other community organizations.
The Winnipeg Free Press, for its part, has criticized the provincial government for inadequate social assistance rates (such as the editorial mentioned above), and multiple columns have explored the potential for a guaranteed annual income to replace our exhaustively complicated welfare system (Generosity doesn’t solve poverty, Dec. 17, 2014; An end to the perpetual welfare trap? Aug. 22 2012).
A central element to poverty is of course a lack of money, and as a member of Make Poverty History Manitoba, the Canadian CED Network–Manitoba is supportive of efforts Community-Based Solutions Represent Our Best Chance To Beat Poverty | PopularResistance.Org: