Seniors across B.C. rally for higher pensions
CBC
Rallies took place across British Columbia on Thursday to protest pensions that organizers say are not keeping up with the cost of living.
Advocacy group Seniors Tin Cup organized marches in seven cities across B.C., saying many seniors are living below the poverty line.
More than 100 people gathered in the Okanagan city of Vernon, including Lorraine Beaudoin.
"We're marching because seniors cannot live just on their pensions," Beaudoin said. "It's impossible to live on $1,200 a month."
Rallies were also held in Kamloops, Vancouver, Surrey, White Rock and other communities.
WATCH | Seniors call for pensions to keep up with cost of living:
The group is asking the provincial government to index the B.C. senior's supplement to inflation and fund other services for seniors like extended health benefits, housing, and transit.
They're also asking the province to work with the federal government to raise pensions.
"That's why we're here is to get more money in their pensions just to bring them up to poverty level," said Sue Reid, who helped organize a rally in Surrey, B.C. "We're not asking for any over that, just poverty level would work for now."
Reid says many seniors live below the poverty line and sometimes have to choose between essentials like housing, food, and medication.
The monthly old age pension for people over 75 is up to $784.67, while the guaranteed income supplement for a single person is up to $1,065.47, for a total of $22,201.68 a year.
A report released in November by United Way B.C. cited Statistics Canada data showing more than one in six B.C. seniors in 2021 had after-tax low incomes, defined as 50 per cent or less than the median adjusted after‑tax income of private households.
That was a "dramatic reversal" from three decades ago when seniors had the lowest low-income rates of any age group, United Way said.
The report says in 2001, only 8.6 per cent of people 65 and older in the province were in the low-income category, compared with 16 per cent of younger adults. By 2021, 15.2 per cent of seniors were in the low-income group, compared with 8.1 per cent of younger adults.