Raise the Rates: 2nd Annual Welfare Food Challenge
BCCPD has received the following notice:
September 24, 2013
Vancouver, Unceded Coast Salish Territory
Raise the Rates: 2nd Annual Welfare Food Challenge
Hungry for a Welfare Raise
Raise the Rates is inviting you to participate in the 2nd Annual Welfare Food Challenge. Starting on October 16, World Food Day, we are inviting British Columbians to eat only what they can purchase based on what welfare recipients receive for one week.
The event is to highlight the inadequacy of welfare rates in BC. A single person receives only $610 a month, stuck at this rate for over 6 years. Raise the Rates, with others, is working to raise public awareness of the extreme poverty of people on welfare and how this causes ill-health, stress and emotional harm. It also costs the people of BC billions of wasted dollars every year.
Taking place from Wednesday, October 16 to Tuesday, October 22, Welfare Food Challenge participants will be expected to live on only the food they can purchase with $26 dollars. This is based on the knowledge that welfare recipients have to pay for rent, bus tickets, phone calls and some hygiene out of their $610, and there is little money left for other expenses.
Last year’s Welfare Food Challenge was a success with over 130 people taking part across the province including families, school and university students, people in work and seniors. We gained good mainstream and social media coverage.
We also hope you will document and publicize your experiences. This could include:
• Writing blog posts for our website
• Posted directly to social media
• Attending a news conference and speaking to the media about the challenge.
• Sharing your experiences with your friends, family, community members, and policy makers.
If you would like to find out more about Raise the Rates or last years Welfare Food Challenge look at www.raisetherates.org and http://welfarefoodchallenge.org/.
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/635990433089949
Twitter is: https://twitter.com/RaisetheRates
The issues of poverty and low income are of great concern and are garnering huge attention in BC. We hope that by continuing to push the government and raise public awareness about the inadequacy of welfare rates and the costs of poverty we will eventually see a change.
Thank you for considering taking the Welfare Food Challenge. Please contact Bill Hopwood at bill50@vcn.bc.ca or 604 738-1653 if you have any questions or would like to participate.
Sincerely,
Bill Hopwood
Raise the Rates, Organizer
At least 11% of the population, and over 15% of children, in BC are food insecure. (Household Food Insecurity in Canada, 2011)
Fill Your Prescription at No Frills, Help Raise Funds for BCCPD
September 27, 2013 by DABC
What is this program and how will it benefit you?
– Raise funds for people with disabilities by supporting the BC Coalition of People with Disabilities (BCCPD). Prescriptions filled at No Frills Pharmacy, located at 310 West Broadway in Vancouver, will help raise funds for the BCCPD.
– After fill you a prescription with No Frills Pharmacy, receive 20% off all No Frills name brand non-prescription medications after you register with your stamped Loblaw Card at No Frills Pharmacy.
– No Frills will contact your old pharmacy and transfer over your client info Free home delivery of No Frills Pharmacy prescriptions to anywhere in the Lower Mainland.
– If you have to pay for part of your No Frills prescription, receive a discount voucher for No Frills groceries.
How to Participate:
Register in-person with Nicole at the BCCPD office, #204- 456 West Broadway in Vancouver. Complete a short form and receive a stamped card. Take the card with you to No Frills Pharmacy at 310 West Broadway and present this when you are filling out your prescription. (You must fill a prescription first, in order to receive the benefits listed above).
*Note: this program is only available at No Frills Pharmacy’s West Broadway location. This program is not applicable to the grocery section of the No Frills store.
For more information, call Nicole at: 604-875-0188.
Vancouver Council Considering Bylaw Changes- Request for Speakers
September 23, 2013 by DABC
The BCCPD has received the following notice from Jill Weiss, Chair of the City of Vancouver’s Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee:
Vancouver City Council Considering Bylaw Changes that Will Have Very Important Impact for People with Disabilities and Seniors
Tuesday September 24 and Wednesday September 25
From the City of Vancouver Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee and the City of Vancouver Seniors Advisory Committee
Vancouver City Council will consider bylaw changes to make all new housing adaptable and minimally accessible on Tuesday, September 24, at 9:30am. They may listen to speakers on the next day, Wednesday, September 25, at 9:30am.
If you are able, please ask to speak to this historic motion by emailing mayorandcouncil@vancouver.ca or by calling Terri Burke 871-6399 or Laura Kazakoff 871-6353.
We’ve attached the full staff report recommending adaptable housing changes to the Vancouver housing bylaw and it is also on the city’s website http://former.vancouver.ca/ctyclerk/cclerk/20130924/documents/rr1.pdf. Please note that the report also recommends other changes not related to accessibility.
The pages describing the adaptable provisions are on pages 9-11, 15, 17, & 23-25.
Background information:
The City of Vancouver Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee and the Seniors Advisory Committee have been working for over two years on this bylaw change with city staff. We believe this to be an excellent bylaw that includes many basic accessibility features:
1. wider doors, stairs & halls;
2. reachable light switches and bath controls;
3. bathroom on the main floor that a person can get in or out of if using a wheelchair or walker.
The bylaw also includes features that will make possible to adapt the dwelling later at little cost:
1. reinforcement in bathroom walls so that grab bars can be installed later
2. stairs wide enough for future stair lifts;
3. lower drain pipes so kitchen & bathroom counters can be lowered;
4. bathrooms that can easily be adapted for a barrier free shower.
The cost of these measures is minimal – $685 maximum per house – the benefits and cost savings to people in the future are substantial. The bylaw will ensure that everyone can live in or easily adapt any new housing in Vancouver.
One very significant feature is missing from this proposed bylaw. It does NOT include an accessible entrance to houses, townhouses or laneway houses. In other words, you could live in the house, but you couldn’t get to or from the front door. This needs changing so that there is one stair-free accessible entrance to all new housing.
This feature is absent because there’s a different process requiring zoning changes. The Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee and the Seniors Advisory Committee decided to support the proposed bylaw, on condition that an accessible path to a house entrance is included in the recommendations to Council.
Part of this proposal does ask staff to study and report back on the feasibility of an accessible entrance. Recommendation E on page 1 states: “THAT Council direct the Director of Planning and Chief Building Official to report back in 18 months on the feasibility of mandating an accessible path of travel from the street to at least one exterior entrance of all one and two-level family houses, laneway houses, secondary suites, town houses and stacked town house type units.”
It is really important to tell Council that the lack of an accessible path is a crucial flaw, and that they should pass recommendation E to direct staff to bring back a proposal for a required accessible path promptly.
Please ask to speak and please let other people know. Getting this bylaw passed and soon thereafter a required accessible path to a house entrance, would make a huge difference to ensure that everyone, including seniors and people with disabilities, can use housing in our city.
More background:
The bylaw is designed to provide everyone with basic access and adaptability at reasonable cost – $685/house at the time of construction. Most of the features cost little or nothing, but if required later costs would be very high. For example, the costs of reinforcing the bathroom walls at the time of construction costs approximately $50, but if required later would cost about $1,000. Similarly, the cost to ensure the bathroom floor is reinforced properly for a future barrier free shower is minimal, but the cost of installing a barrier free shower in the future without that initial adaptability is $7,000-$10,000.
Other cities require adaptability that works well. For example, London England has required all newly built housing to be adaptable and minimally accessible for almost ten years. There is research on England’s adaptable Lifetime Homes Model showing that it saves money in the long run, and London has had no problems resulting from requiring basic access and adaptability.
An accessible path to an entrance does need to be added. England has required an accessible path to one entrance of all new housing for fourteen years, again with no problems. An accessible path is also required in most Scandinavian countries and in some US counties like Pima County or Bolingbrook.
Remember to ask to speak as early as you can Monday. Speaking will likely happen Wednesday.
Please feel free to pass this email along to anyone you think might be interested.
Thanks everyone and we look forward to a truly inclusive city.
Jill Weiss
Chair, City of Vancouver Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee
(604) 608-0384
Chris Morrissey
Chair, City of Vancouver Seniors Advisory Committee
(604) 877-7768