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Alberta to claw back federal disability benefit from AISH recipients

Alberta to claw back federal disability benefit from AISH recipients

CBC26-03-2025

The federal government is rolling out a new Canada Disability Benefit this summer, but qualified recipients in Alberta won't see the extra money if they already receive payments under AISH, or Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped program.
The Alberta government plans to reduce AISH payments by $200, the monthly amount for the federal benefit.
Jason Nixon, Minister of Seniors, Community and Social Services, defended the clawback. Payments for a single person on AISH are $1,901 each month, which he said is the highest in Canada. He said the federal government set a minimum of $1,811 for provinces to meet.
"We're going to continue to be committed to it and have already exceeded what the federal government has asked us to do," he said.
"We can't continue to have rates as high as we have in our province compared to the rest of the country and then continue to grow indefinitely without seeing serious consequences to our AISH programs long-term."
The first month of eligibility for the federal benefit will be this June with the first payments starting in July. To be eligible, individuals need to be aged 18 to 64 and have been approved for the Disability Tax Credit.
Frustration and fear
AISH recipients are frustrated they won't get the benefits of the new federal payment.
Charli McDonald said her husband receives AISH due to multiple disabilities that prevents him from working.
McDonald said life is expensive when you have a disability. For example, some of the medical aids her husband needs for mobility are partially or not covered by the Alberta government. She said rent in Grande Prairie is not cheap either.
McDonald said people are frightened and despondent about the clawback. She said she is furious over the government's reasoning.
"Basically insinuating that you should be thankful that we're giving you this and that we're not reducing your payments," she said.
"It was so gross, the whole statement. I was just disgusted."
Marie Renaud, the NDP MLA for St. Albert and critic for community and social services, said she has heard many stories about the hardship the clawback will cause after asking for them on social media.
Renaud said they include people who live in rural Alberta who skip medical appointments with a specialist in larger centres because they can't afford the travel.
"It makes the difference between food bank usage or not," she said.
"I heard from all kinds of disabled people that this makes a difference between [their] children being able to participate in sports or for [them] being able to buy new clothing or … being able to get a bus pass this month.
"That's how desperate people are."
Renaud said it was hard to get the government to admit they were planning to clawback the benefit in the first place.

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Drake blasts 'goof' Jagmeet Singh for attending Kendrick Lamar concert in Toronto

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Drake blasts 'goof' Jagmeet Singh for attending Kendrick Lamar concert in Toronto
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Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The former federal NDP leader who helped steer his party to historic defeat in April, losing his own seat along the way, went viral after he was snapped by fans inside the sold-out Rogers Centre. After a high-profile feud with Lamar played out on streaming services last year, Drake hasn't been shy about cutting ties with friends who seemingly sided with the Compton rapper. Former Toronto Raptor DeMar DeRozan, who was once one of Drake's closets pals, was dropped after he appeared in the music video for Lamar's scathing Not Like Us . Drake also ended his friendship with basketball great LeBron James after he was spotted at Lamar's 'Pop Out' show in Los Angeles last June. 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' I went for SZA not Kendrick.' he wrote. 'I was born in this city. I love this city. But real talk, I get it. I shouldn't have gone at all.' Singh then credited Drake and his OVO brand with 'lifting up' Toronto and Canada. 'For me, it'll always be Drake over Kendrick,' he concluded. Jagmeet Singh apologized afer being spotted at Kendrick Lamar's Toronto concert. Photo by Jagmeet Singh / Instagram But his apology drew even more mockery with many commenters ridiculing Singh for bowing down to Drake. ' Imagine a man apologizing to another man for going to see a concert,' one person joked, with another adding, '(Singh) folded after being called a goof. That's always why he's in last place every time in the elections.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Lamar's two-night stop at Rogers Centre was his first time in Toronto since he and Drake were embroiled in a rap beef that spanned several months last spring. 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Winnipeg Free Press

time8 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

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Mary Agnes Welch, a Probe Research partner, said the NDP leading by just shy of by double digits in rural and northern Manitoba, 'is a little unheard of. 'It could be because of the wildfire response and people wanting to rally around the government with so many evacuees here, but for the NDP to be that strong outside the Perimeter Highway is unheard of… if the election was held tomorrow, some of the rural ridings the NDP came close to winning would be real fights.' Adams said he wonders if the drop in Tory numbers is a result of Khan being elected leader. While, under the Tory's weighted system for votes from constituencies, Khan received more points than Wally Daudrich, Daudrich actually received 53 more votes. 'Maybe some PCs have drifted away with Wally Daudrich being defeated?' he said. 'What strikes me is the slow continuing decline of the Progressive Conservatives in Winnipeg and, outside Winnipeg, the growth of NDP support. The NDP have climbed up most quarters (in the polls). The NDP must be happy about that.' Whether it is gender, age, level of education, household income, Indigenous, all racialized or Caucasian, the NDP has a sizeable lead in all these categories over the Tories. The poll also shows while 41 per cent say they would definitely vote for Khan or consider it, 42 per cent say they won't. Eighteen per cent say they are unsure. But Adams said 'I think Obby Khan is quite secure in his leadership. 'It's too early to think about his leadership being precarious. He is one of only two (Tory) MLAs in Winnipeg.' Welch said not only does Khan have 'a pretty tough road ahead,' he is also having to walk a tightrope to gain the Winnipeg voters his party needs to ever have a chance of becoming government again. 'He is getting squeezed by having to be open to Winnipeggers and women in Winnipeg, but also to try to get the Wally Daudrich voters back.' As for Kinew, Adams said while he is still experiencing a honeymoon period, it's now for a different reason than the one which began when his government took over from the previous Tory government. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS 'People are seeing Kinew's federal and provincial discussions of collaboration, his messaging to (U.S. President Donald) Trump's behaviour, and his handling of the crisis of the wildfires,' he said. 'With all three, it's seen as positive for Wab Kinew.' Meanwhile, the Manitoba Liberal Party, under interim leader Cindy Lamoreaux, is at 11 per cent support in Winnipeg, up slightly from March, but still down four percentage points from the election, while outside Winnipeg, the party is tied at three percentage points with the Keystone Party of Manitoba. Sundays Kevin Rollason's Sunday newsletter honouring and remembering lives well-lived in Manitoba. 'Usually, when the federal Liberals brand is strong, it helps the provincial Liberals, but here we see they are not benefiting from the surge in Liberal support,' Adams said. And, with the three percentage points going to the Keystone Party, which is seen as to the right of the Tory party, 'I'm sure that's three per cent Khan would like to have.' Probe Research polled 1,000 Manitoba adults between May 28 and June 10. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 per cent, 95 times out of 100. Kevin RollasonReporter Kevin Rollason is a general assignment reporter at the Free Press. He graduated from Western University with a Masters of Journalism in 1985 and worked at the Winnipeg Sun until 1988, when he joined the Free Press. He has served as the Free Press's city hall and law courts reporter and has won several awards, including a National Newspaper Award. Read more about Kevin. Every piece of reporting Kevin produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

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