THRIVING AFTER 50

Do more for B.C. seniors, says advocate

Do more for B.C. seniors, says advocate

Seniors in British Columbia are feeling “invisible and forgotten” as they fall thorough the cracks in existing provincial support systems, their advocate says.

In his first report as B.C.’s senior’s advocate, Dan Levitt says affordability was the top concern during visits with hundreds of seniors in more than 20 communities in April.

One in four seniors in B.C. earns less than $23,000 a year, an amount below the poverty line, Levitt said.

The report outlines what Levitt heard during his tour, including that B.C. seniors on fixed incomes are disproportionately affected by the high cost of living.

It found many seniors are unable to absorb increased costs for housing, food, medical equipment, mobility aids and other necessities for healthy aging.

Levitt said more low-income seniors are at risk of homelessness and many are turning to food banks as they struggle to make ends meet.

The report makes several recommendations for the B.C. government, starting with redesigning the Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters program.

Levitt said the program is failing to ensure low-income seniors aren’t paying more than 30 per cent of their income on housing. The benefit isn’t tied to inflation or rent increases, he added.

The report also calls on the province to increase its seniors supplement — currently set at a maximum of $99.30 per month for single seniors — and index it to inflation.

Premier David Eby said seniors are feeling the pinch of global inflation, high interests rates and other costs.

Eby said that’s why his NDP government had doubled the seniors supplement and recently expanded the Shelter Aid program so more seniors would be eligible.

This year’s budget also committed $354 million over three years for home and community care for seniors, an expansion Eby described as “dramatic.”

But Levitt said the recent changes “don’t go far enough.”

The report from his office breaks down an example in which an existing participant earning $20,844 — the average income of recipients in the program — would see an increase of about $115 once the changes take effect in August. But that senior would continue to pay more than 40 per cent of their income on rent, the report says.

In another scenario, it says a senior earning the new income cap of $37,240 with low market rent of $1,100 would receive the minimum subsidy of $50 a month, but still pay over 30 per cent of their income towards rent.

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