Our daily blog offers selected news of interest to SmartSAVER’s stakeholders and shines a light on the creative ways that communities are promoting the Canada Learning Bond. Stay up to date, read what others are doing and share your own story.

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We’d love to hear from you! Tell us about your CLB promotion or share tips to engage eligible families. Do you have a question for the community? Submit your stories, ideas and questions to info@SmartSAVER.org and we’ll share it on our blog.


IN THE NEWS: OCTOBER 26, 2016

Today’s news includes articles about education, and youth in care from various sources including CBC News, and the Edmonton Journal.


Poverty reduction plan aims to cut rate in half by 2023.
CBC News Calgary. October 25, 2016.

Payday loans: Market trends.
Federal Consumer Agency of Canada. October 25, 2016.  

Video: The colour of your skin impacts your success in school: report.
CityNews. October 21, 2016.

Baby box program in Nunavut, a first in Canada.
NationTalk. October 25, 2016.

Extreme weather shelter announced for Parksville Qualicum Beach.
Parksville Qualicum Beach News. October 25, 2016.


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A million Canadian kids missing out on free education money

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Released today in the Institute for Research on Public Policy’s Policy Options: This new article by Andrew Parkin draws on a more extensive research paper commissioned by the Omega Foundation.

A million Canadian kids missing out on free education money.

Policy Options. October 25, 2016.

Policies designed to get kids into post-secondary education need to focus on early intervention, including early access to savings.

Since the 2015 election, the Liberal government has made two major adjustments to federal programs targeted at children and youth.  First, the uniform payment to every family with children was replaced by the new Canada Child Benefit, a benefit worth more to lower income families and withheld from the wealthy. In a similar vein, the government announced it would phase out some of the existing tax credits for post-secondary education (PSE), which were available to all families with taxable income, so it could use the savings to increase the value of grants for students from low-income families.

Still, the work to improve support to children from low-income families is not done – 1 million low-income children each year are still missing out on the Canada Learning Bond.

Read complete article.

By Andrew Parkin. Dr. Parkin is an independent public policy analyst and consultant specializing in education. He was associate executive director of the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation and director general of the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada.


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