National Council Of Welfare
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The National Council of Welfare (NCW) was a Canadian arm's length advisory body to the federal
Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development The minister of employment, workforce development and disability inclusion () is the minister of the Crown in the Canadian Cabinet who is responsible for Employment and Social Development Canada, the Government of Canada department that oversees p ...
on poverty and the realities of low-income Canadians. Its legal mandate was to "advise the Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development in respect of any matter relating to social development that the Minister may refer to the Council for its consideration or that the Council considers appropriate". The Council consisted of members drawn from across Canada and appointed by the Governor-in-Council. All members served in their personal capacities rather than as representatives of organizations or agencies. The Council published reports and communicated with the Minister on a wide range of issues involving poverty and public policy. It also presented submissions t
Parliamentary Committees
and Royal Commissions and participated in a range of government and non-government workshops and events on poverty-related issues. It released regular publications about the level and adequacy of welfare incomes in Canada and statistical profiles of poverty in Canada. The Council also published special topic reports, for example, 'The Dollars & Sense of Solving Poverty'. Over the years, subjects included: * a national anti-poverty strategy * Aboriginal children and youth * poverty lines and statistics * income security programs and policies * the cost of poverty * child benefits * the tax system * the retirement income system * employment programs * social services, such as child care and child welfare * legal services * women and children


History

The National Council of Welfare was first established in legislation in 1962 'Chapter 16, Statutes of Canada 1962-63 amending the Department of Health and Welfare'' The members consisted of the Deputy Minister of Welfare and the Deputy Ministers of Provincial Departments of Welfare, among others. It was intended that the Council act in an advisory capacity to the Minister of Health and Welfare on matters relating to welfare. The Council was completely reconstituted in 1969 under the ''Government Organization Act''. Official federal and provincial government appointees were excluded and representation was changed to include persons from non-government sources with experience in fields such as labour, teaching and welfare, as well as persons in receipt of one form or other of welfare benefits. In a press release anuary 19, 1970announcing the establishment of the new National Council of Welfare, the Minister of Health and Welfare, John Munro, stated that:
There has been a great deal of talk about the need to create opportunities for the poor to participate in the development of programs aimed at combating poverty … I believe that this Council can make an important contribution to achieving that end.
One of the early activities of the Council was to develop a proposal for the first national conference of representatives of organizations of the poor. The Poor People’s Conference was held in Toronto in January 1971. At the conference, over 500 delegates representing more than 250 anti-poverty groups passed resolutions aimed at fighting poverty in Canada. One of the resolutions was to form a national organization. This led to the creation of the National Anti-Poverty Organization later that year (now called
Canada Without Poverty Canada Without Poverty (CWP) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to eradicating poverty in Canada and educating Canadians about the link between poverty and human rights. It is based in Ottawa, with a second office in Vancouver and is run ...
). Following this stance, the Council advocated in 1976 for the implementation of the
guaranteed annual income Universal basic income (UBI) is a social welfare proposal in which all citizens of a given population regularly receive an unconditional transfer payment, that is, without a means test or need to work. It would be received independently of an ...
in Canada. When the Department of Health and Welfare was split in 1993, the Council moved with the welfare/income security side of the department to advise the Minister of the newly formed Human Resources Development Canada (HRDC) 'Bill C-11, an Act to establish the Department of Human Resources Development'' When HRDC was reorganized in 2003, the Council became an advisory group to the Minister of Social Development 'Bill C-22, an Act to establish the Department of Social Development'' Currently, the Council advises the Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada
HRSDC Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC; french: Emploi et Développement social Canada; french: EDSC, label=none)''Employment and Social Development Canada'' is the applied title under the Federal Identity Program; the legal title is Dep ...
, a department that was formed in 2006 by merging the two departments of Social Development Canada and Human Resources and Skills Development Canada. In 2012, the Canadian government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper cut the entire budget of the National Council of Welfare, effectively closing the Council.


See also

*
Poverty in Canada Poverty in Canada refers to the state or condition in which a person or household lacks essential resourcesfinancial or otherwiseto maintain a modest standard of living in their community. Researchers and governments have used different metrics ...


External links


CWPHRSDC


References

{{authority control Government agencies of Canada 2012 disestablishments in Canada 1962 establishments in Canada