We're going to have to bear with my voice.
I think that first of all there is a lot of misrepresenting of what is necessary for autonomous decision-making. In terms of poverty, you have to understand that poverty is both a cause of our oppression and also a manifestation of the position that disabled people hold in society.
There is no one who is not disabled who would qualify for track two, so the question of.... No, that makes absolutely no sense.
In terms of poverty—the problems and the concerns—there are many concerns we are hearing at the Disability Filibuster about the disability benefit. They're about gatekeeping, the criteria, how these things will be enacted. There are lots of unknowns, but it doesn't even seem to offer the hope of moving above the poverty line.
There is new research out that has shown that the poverty line has an ableist bias. There is a paper in a peer-reviewed journal showing something that disabled people have said all along, which is that it costs more to live as a disabled person in Canada—