Ricardo Tranjan
For policy-makers, perhaps the most obvious lesson of the pandemic is that poverty, including child poverty, can be reduced much more quickly than Ontario has done in recent years. Timid policies that unfold incrementally over decades are of no use to children who will be grown up before we finally get around to taking action.
Ontario’s political rhetoric creates divisions where, in reality, none exist.
There is so much talk about housing insecurity in this country. Yet governments allow payday lenders to set up shop in neighbourhoods where high rents perpetuate financial insecurity.
A look at what the provincial party platforms do for renters
With inflation on the rise, the June 2 Ontario election is shaping up to be about affordability and measures that put money back into people’s…
My mother grew up in a poor family in the interior of Brazil, and raised four children just a few blocks from one of São…
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Download 1.16 MB52 pages Two years of the pandemic have disrupted the learning and development of Ontario’s elementary and secondary school students. In particular, households with…
A report card on child and family poverty in Ontario Download 752.36 KB 44 pages Ontario is a wealthy province in a wealthy country, yet…
Rapport sur la pauvreté des enfants et des familles en Ontario Download 774.47 KB44 pages L’Ontario est une province riche dans un pays riche et…
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