Thank you very much.
Thanks for the opportunity to appear before the committee to discuss this issue, which for many of us has been a preoccupation. We have hoped for quite some time that the federal government would engage in this issue.
The Colour of Poverty Campaign is a province-wide initiative made up of individuals and organizations working to build community-based capacity to address issues of racialized poverty and the resulting increase of social exclusion and marginalization, particularly of racialized groups across the province of Ontario.
As we well know from the presentations that have been made to this point, the gap between rich and poor in Ontario is widening. But what is much less well understood is that the impact of this widening gap has a disproportionate impact. It has been felt disproportionately by members of racialized communities, communities of colour, but also first peoples, aboriginal peoples, in this province.
The increasing racialization, or colour-coding, of all the major social and economic indicators can be gleaned not only from the statistics on income and wealth but also from any number of other different socio-economic measures, such as inequalities in access to health, and with respect to health status; inequalities in access to education, and with respect to learning outcomes; higher dropout, or push-out, rates for many racialized community learners; inequality in access to employment opportunities; under-representation in well-paying, stable employment; and over-representation in low-paying, unstable, and low-status jobs. In many cases, this means that the experience is compounded for the communities and in terms of the possible intergenerational poverty trap.
When we look at housing, there are higher levels of under-housing and homelessness, with a re-emergence of what is being referred to as racialized residential enclaves, particularly within the city of Toronto but also in some of the other cities in Ontario.
These experiences of marginalization and increasing segregation are of concern to us. They express the full experience of poverty, going beyond the particular numbers. We think it's really important, when considering how to address issues of poverty, that we look beyond the low-income cutoff and beyond the low-income measure in order to understand the full experience of exclusion and the deprivation that is the experience of many racialized group members.
The evidence confirming that these communities are increasingly disproportionately disadvantaged by poverty is being increasingly generated. It is now at a point where we can refer to it as overwhelming.
The United Way of Greater Toronto’s Poverty by Postal Code report, which was released about four years ago, showed very clearly that over the 20-year period between 1980 and 2000, while the poverty rate actually fell among the non-racialized population by 28%, it rose by 361% among the racialized population. By the end of that period, 60% of those who were poor in the city of Toronto were racialized families.
Other reports that are even more recent, such as a report by the Children's Aid Society of Toronto, a report by People for Education, and a report by the province entitled Review of the Roots of Youth Violence, all come to very similar conclusions with regard to the disproportionate experience of poverty among racialized populations in the province.
Given these stark realities, it is imperative that all levels of government actively engage in talking about how to reduce issues of poverty and how to eliminate poverty, particularly among racialized populations.
Racialized communities are rarely mentioned when discussing poverty. They are often mentioned as an afterthought or they are hidden within the generic “minority groups” or “immigrant” categories. Unfortunately, the tendency of mainstream organizations to use the language of immigration substantially limits the understanding of the experience of poverty among racialized groups. It is essential and critical to understand that racialized groups are vulnerable to poverty partly because of their racialized status. And unless we understand that and establish that very clearly, whatever strategies we use are going to be limited in terms of their impact on the experience of poverty.
We do have a number of recommendations that we think are very important to put on the table. First, there needs to be, on the part of the federal government, a clear commitment and recognition of the racialized dimension of the experience of poverty. We think that is important if you are going to craft either legislation or programs that will effectively address the experience of poverty among racialized groups.
Second, we think it is critical in terms of fashioning measures against poverty that we use disaggregated data. The issue of disaggregated data is essential to understanding the actual experience of poverty and the depth of poverty, especially among racialized groups. This is so we can measure the effect, but also whatever impact the programs and policies and legislation could have.
It is also important to address the issue of child care and to address it by establishing a national child care program. For racialized women particularly, their experience of poverty is impacted by the inability to have access to child care. Too many of them do not have parents or grandparents who are able to compensate for the absence of child care, and too many of them require access to child care spaces so that they can engage in the labour market.
Last is the issue of employment insurance. Because of the nature of the participation in the labour market, which is highly precarious, we think it is really critical that the federal government undertake key reforms that will ensure access to employment insurance benefits for those who are employed part-time, those who are on contracts, and those who have a lot fewer hours than would be the case at this stage. It is essential to ensure that they have access to the benefits. But they also need access to training, so that when they engage in the labour market, as they do in that process of in and out, they have an opportunity to strengthen their skills and engage more productively than the last time they were engaged.
There are a number of other key recommendations that are really important and need to be addressed. For instance, the federal government should immediately implement the Pay Equity Task Force recommendations to deal with systemic inequities in pay based on race. It should also reverse its decision with respect to the Human Rights Tribunal's power to adjudicate pay equity cases.
It is essential that the government consider strategies such as paid internships, subsidies, and/or tax incentives for employers who are committed to practising employment equity and other measures that ensure equal access to the labour market for racialized groups. We see the equal participation of these groups in the labour market as being essential to addressing the issues of poverty.
Last but not least, rather than going in the direction of more tax cuts, it is essential that the government have the capacity to do the kind of programming that is necessary to build a strong base of public goods so that these communities can have access to those goods.
Thank you very much.