HANNA PETERSEN PHOTORoughly 40 poeple attended the consultation held at the Port Hardy Fire Hall on March 27.

HANNA PETERSEN PHOTORoughly 40 poeple attended the consultation held at the Port Hardy Fire Hall on March 27.

Poverty in Port Hardy: residents partipate in province-wide consultation

"How many people walked into this room tonight and knew we had 915 people living in poverty?"

  • Mar. 28, 2018 12:00 a.m.

A poverty reduction consultation meeting was held at the Port Hardy fire hall, where residents were invited to participate in the building of a province-wide proverty reduction plan.

As part of a provincial election promise, community consultation meetings have been held in communities and Friendship Centres across the province beginning October 2017.

The March 27 meeting, which was attended by roughly 40 people, was facilitated by Don Kattler, Family Consultant with Ministry of Children and Family Development, and hosted with funding from the Mount Waddington Health Network.

Kattler explained that the agenda for the consultation meetings were the same across the province and focused on two questions: 1. What are the issues facing you and people living in poverty right now? 2. What would address the issues and help you and people out of poverty?

Some of the issues addressed at the consultation included topics like addictions, lack of resources, employment opportunities, and affordable housing.

The Regional District of Mount Waddington has the third highest child poverty rate in the province, and during the meeting, Kattler explained that census data shows in Port Hardy alone there are 915 people living in poverty out of a population of over 4,000.

“How many people walked into this room tonight and knew we had 915 people living in poverty?” asked Kattler, adding “People need to know this information.”

Each table wrote down what they thought would help people out of poverty, and participants were invited to place stickers on which solutions they thought would be most impactful.

Some of the solutions identified included living wages, guaranteed income, affordable childcare, affordable and safe housing, and educational opportunities.

Kattler also noted all of the information from the consultation will be transcribed and reported back to the government.

“Even though this is a provincial consultation there are a lot of things we can do at a local level,” said Kattler, pointing to community gardens, one of the possible solutions, as an example.

Those who were not able to attend the meeting but would still like to participate can submit their feedback online at engage.gov.bc.ca/bcpovertyreduction/submit-your-feedback until March 31 or email BCpovertyReduction@gov.bc.ca.

Information collected from the consultations from across the province will also be available for the public to view online through the BC Poverty Reduction website.

North Island Gazette