British Columbia’s updated Poverty Reduction Strategy (PDF, 3.1MB) sets a path to reduce overall poverty by 60%. The strategy also sets a road map to reduce child poverty by 75%, and, for the first time, seniors’ poverty by 50% by 2034.
It builds on the progress made through B.C.’s first Poverty Reduction Strategy, 2019 TogetherBC (PDF, 881KB). The new 2024 strategy:
The strategy’s vision is of a province where:
To achieve this vision and make B.C. better for people, government will continue:
The strategy identifies eight critical action areas for government to focus on:
Targets, timelines, and accountability are laid out in the Poverty Reduction Strategy Act. The Act was amended in 2024 to align with our updated strategy.
New legislated 10-year 2034 targets (using 2016 as the baseline) to reduce the:
We will continue to prepare annual progress reports by October 1 that describe the actions taken and progress made:
An independent advisory committee will continue to advise the Minister. It will include representation from around the province, like:
The committee includes a letter in each annual report. Their letter will outline their views on progress made and progress required.
British Columbia’s roadmap to tackle poverty.
Actions taken and progress to reduce poverty in B.C.
In 2023, we heard from over 10,000 people across the province, over 70% with lived experience of poverty:
Read the What We Heard Report (PDF, 12.5MB)
We undertook a separate, distinctions-based engagement to hear from Indigenous people:
Read the Indigenous Engagement report (PDF, 7.2MB)
Stigma and high costs have made it difficult for people living in British Columbia to access menstrual supplies. This report includes short- to long-term strategies to address this pressing issue.
Read the BC Period Poverty Task Force Final Report (PDF, 1.2MB)