Still too many children living with poverty
Abbotsford News
May 3, 2007
Child poverty in Canada is a national disgrace that shames
us on the world stage and offends our international legal
obligations. That was a central message put forward last week
by Canadian senators and physicians who are lobbying Ottawa
to take the rights and needs of children far more seriously
than it has in the past.
In a report called Children: The Silenced Citizens, the Senate
human rights committee faulted Ottawa for failing miserably
to live up to its obligations to protect the rights and freedoms
of children. One of its key recommendations calls for a federal
strategy to combat child poverty with clear goals and timetables,
including preventive measures for high-risk families and a
coherent housing strategy.
Meanwhile, a Child Health Summit sponsored by a coalition
of physicians lobbying to improve health outcomes for children
met in Ottawa to discuss how to improve Canada's unacceptably
mediocre international ranking on child health. Both groups'
conclusions underline the stark fact that children's
rights and health are inextricably linked to poverty, and
often are neglected.
In addition to calling on Prime Minister Stephen Harper's
Conservative government to address poverty and housing issues
directly, the all-party Senate committee urged Ottawa to work
with the provinces to establish standards and guidelines for
improving early childhood development programs and child care,
matched with adequate funding. Child care has fallen off the
federal agenda since the Conservatives cancelled a federal-provincial
agreement....
How little does Canada care about children, despite Parliament's
unanimous vote in 1989 to end child poverty by 2000? Today,
18 years later, among 26 wealthy nations we rank 22nd in terms
of children living in relative poverty. By any standard, these
are dismal statistics.
As Sir Albert Aynsley-Green, the Child Commissioner for England,
put it at the health summit: "The badge of honour of
a civilized society is to protect its most vulnerable."
We are nowhere close.
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