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Jun 05, 2007 07:51 PM Christopher Maughan Canadian Press The province's social service agencies are facing a huge funding crisis, and it's time for the government to take action, protesters said Tuesday at a rally outside the Ontario legislature. Hundreds of people from a wide spectrum of agencies braved unseasonably cold temperatures at Queen's Park to call on the Liberal government for more consistent financial support. Fred Hahn, secretary-treasurer of CUPE Ontario, said because social service agencies must reapply for funding every year, they are increasingly unable to deliver all the services they should.
Social service agencies count on the provincial government for 54 per cent of their funding on average, though some depend entirely on Queen's Park to keep them going. Hahn said when he worked with developmentally disabled kids in Toronto, there wasn't enough money to provide day-care and education services, and that's still the case today. He said some mothers would drop their child off on the weekend and simply never come back, knowing that under the law, the child would be placed into children's aid programs for kids of unfit parents. In those programs, the developmentally disabled get priority for full-time help.
Problems like these, Hahn said, are popping up provincewide. He said it's not uncommon for children needing mental health services to wait a year to see a counsellor. Bobbye Goldenberg, a social worker in Cambridge, Ont., said she's familiar with the problems Hahn described, noting waiting lists in Waterloo Region have surpassed eight months.
Robin Silverman, who works with the homeless at a Toronto community centre, said inconsistent government funding leads to high burnout rates among workers at agencies like hers.
Silverman said such uncertainty is unacceptable for people who play such an important role in the lives of others.
Labour Minister Steve Peters acknowledged there is a need to come up with a new funding strategy for social service agencies, but stopped short of committing to the multi-year, core funding approach advocated by those at the demonstration.
But Peters said that doesn't necessarily mean the government can afford to commit to the multi-year approach on a wider scale. Hahn said he's not impressed with the investment because the government has provided few details on how the money will be spent.
NDP Leader Howard Hampton also said the government has a long way to go.
Roger Breen, a homeless man who's been using shelters for the past six months, said he worries the one he uses now might close down.
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