B.C. increases monthly payments to foster care families
Minister says increase is the second since New Democrats came to power in 2017 after being frozen for a decade
Foster families in British Columbia will get a monthly pay raise of hundreds of dollars starting April 1.
Mitzi Dean, the child and family development minister, says families fostering kids age 11 and under will see their payments increase by $450 a month to $1,465 per child, while caregivers for those age 12 to 19 will see a $531 monthly increase to $1,655 per child.
Dean says rates were frozen for nearly a decade under the previous government, and the latest increase is the second implemented since the New Democrats came to power in 2017.
The increased funding, Dean said, will fill a "critical need" for families hit hard by inflation, as they provide children with food, clothing and other essentials as living costs rise.
The province boosted funding for caregivers first in 2019 and injected a further $85 million in the 2023 budget, affecting approximately 7,800 children and caregiver families.
Dean says funding is also increasing for other caregivers, including those with high- and special-needs children, along with so-called kinship families who take children under their care from family members.
Kinship care
Katie Robertson, executive director of the Parent Support Services Society of B.C., says she was raised in a kinship care situation herself, and the increased funding will give kids security and stability while helping keep families intact.
"As a young child, my mother struggled with a substance use disorder and we lived in deep poverty, and I experienced horrific neglect and violence and abuse," Robertson said.
"I left home when I was 13 and were it not for several families providing kinship care in my early teenage years, I would not be here today.''
Robertson said kinship care is common, especially in Indigenous cultures, when parents can't care for their own children, who are then taken in by aunts, uncles, grandparents and others.
Relatives who find themselves caring for a family member's child are often caught off guard, representing "a major life change physically, emotionally, spiritually and financially for both the caregivers and children,'' Robertson said.
"These increases will help many kinship care families to focus on what matters most, giving these children and youth the best opportunity to live a life filled with love, stability, community and connection,'' she said.
"When kinship care is an option, families stay intact, cultures are preserved and children are given a chance to thrive."