Skip to content

The Arts Incubator

Winnipeg, Manitoba

cropped-1.jpg
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Winnipeg, Manitoba
    • Art Borups Corners
    • Artists, Collaborators And Mentors
    • Hubs
      • Borups Corners
      • Dyment Recreation Hall and Complex
      • Minneapolis, Minnesota
    • Funders and Supporters
      • Canada Council for the Arts
      • Global Dignity Canada
      • Local Services Board of Melgund
      • Manitoba Arts Council
      • Minneapolis College of Art and Design
    • Reports
      • 2023-2024 Report
      • 2021-2022 Report
    • Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Tracker
  • Projects
    • 2025 Climate Entrepreneurship Survey
    • Food Security
      • Towards a Framework for Northern Food Systems Innovation
      • Food Preservation Training and Curriculum Development
      • Relationship Development and Engagement with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and University of Minnesota Duluth
      • Relationship Development and Engagement Activities with the University of the Arctic
      • The Art of Canning and Creative Entrepreneurship
      • Come Eat With Me: Manitoba Cookbook
    • Incubating Artificial Intelligence
      • Artist Bio Builder Writing Tool
      • Art Idea Generator
      • Asteroids
      • Northern AI Tools Get Trashy
      • Participatory Action Research Assistant
      • The Eco-Innovator’s Journey
      • Step Inside Your Content
    • Media Arts and Storytelling
    • Melgund Township Oral History Project
    • Recreation
      • Art Borups Corners
      • Arts and Recreation for an Aging Population
      • Creative Arts for Community Recreation
      • Facilities
        • The Cook Shack
        • Dyment Recreation Hall
        • Melgund Lake Boat Launch
        • Ice Fishing Shack
      • Storytelling
        • Stories & Publishing Skills
        • The Arts Incubator at Barnes and Noble
        • The Arts Incubator Books at Palace Marketplace
        • The Arts Incubator Books on Thalia
      • Youth Engagement
  • Resources
    • Adaptive Phased Management
    • Climate CO-STAR Builder (ECO_STAR)
    • Entrepreneurship Resources
    • Framework for Recreation in Canada
    • Funding Programs and Sources
    • Parks for All
    • The Common Vision
  • News
    • Borups Corners News
    • Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Arts & Creative Leadership
    • Food Security and Innovation
    • Melgund Township News
    • Photos and Short Stories
    • Winnipeg
  • Events
    • Canada Day 2025
    • 2025-2026 Melgund Township Music Series
  • Contact
  • Home
  • News
  • New report: Child poverty on the rise, undoing historic progress in poverty reduction
  • News

New report: Child poverty on the rise, undoing historic progress in poverty reduction

As pandemic benefits wound down and the cost of living rose, poverty rates rebounded, resulting in over 1 million children living in poverty.
The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg February 15, 2024
As pandemic benefits wound down and the cost of living rose, poverty rates rebounded, resulting in over 1 million children living in poverty.

Campaign 2000 is a national non-partisan coalition monitoring federal progress (or lack thereof) on child and family poverty. Their latest annual report finds that in 2021, despite historic progress achieved in 2020, Canada saw a sharp upswing in national child poverty rates. As pandemic benefits wound down and the cost of living rose, poverty rates rebounded, resulting in over 1 million children living in poverty.

“Twenty-four years have passed since the year 2000, when the federal government’s commitment to eradicate poverty was meant to be fulfilled,” said Chris Brillinger, Executive Director of Family Service Toronto, the backbone agency of Campaign 2000. “The pandemic revealed that, with increased transfers to families and bold investments proven to reduce poverty rates, we can eradicate poverty. Only six years remain to meet the commitments to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, the first of which is No Poverty. We need bolder targets and an actionable plan for ending poverty by 2030.”

The new national report, Unprecedented Progress on Poverty Reduction Being Undone, finds that rates of child poverty increased in every province and territory from 2020 to 2021. The national report will be released in coordination with provincial report cards from partners in British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nunavut and Nova Scotia.

“Provincial and territorial governments have a crucial role to play in fulfilling Canada’s commitments to ending poverty,” said Christine Saulnier, Director of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives-Nova Scotia and co-author of the Nova Scotia report card. “Working together with the federal government, we can urgently implement public policy solutions proven to reduce poverty. We have the fiscal capacity; now we need political will.”

Disproportionately higher rates were seen for people marginalized by colonization, racism and systemic discrimination, including First Nations, Inuit and Métis children and racialized and migrant children. This report emphasizes the need for a trauma-informed rights-based approach to policy development.

Campaign 2000

“Canadian governments have an obligation to uphold all people’s right to an adequate standard of living. Poverty is a violation of this right,” says Natalie Appleyard, Campaign 2000 Steering Committee member and Policy Analyst at Citizens for Public Justice. “If we truly want to be a society where all people are treated as equals, where every child has the opportunity to grow up nurtured and with their needs met, we need to rethink our spending priorities and our attitudes towards poverty in Canada.”

The 2023 update offers a sustainable, achievable, ongoing anti-poverty plan that includes more than 30 recommendations addressing inequality, income security, housing, childcare, decent work and healthcare.

“Children have one chance at childhood, the most sensitive stage of human development. They pay the highest price when our policies and programs fail to protect them from poverty,” said Sevaun Palvetzian, President and CEO of UNICEF Canada. “As a G7 country with one of the world’s largest economies, Canada can do more to fulfill every child’s right to an adequate standard of living – something every child deserves.”

Provincial and Territorial Contacts:
Yukon: 
Kristina Craig, Executive Director, Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition, 867-334- 9318, ed@yapc.ca
North West Territories: Janine Harvey, Executive Director for Tahiuqtiit Women’s Society, Member of Right to Housing Canada, janineharvey11@gmail.com
Nunavut: Amautiit: Nunavut Inuit Women’s Association, admin@amautiit.ca
British Columbia: Adrienne Montani, Executive Director, First Call Child and Youth Advocacy Society, 778-320-4561,adrienne@firstcallbc.org
Alberta: Bradley Lafortune, Executive Director, Public Interest Alberta, Mobile: 780-901-1177, Brad.Lafortune@PIAlberta.org and Sydney Sheloff, Edmonton Social Planning Council, 780-423-2301 ext. 354, sydneys@edmontonsocialplanning.ca
Saskatchewan: Miguel Sanchez PhD, University of Regina, 306-550-7322 miguel@uregina.ca
Manitoba: Kate Kehler, Executive Director, Social Planning Council of Winnipeg, 204-943-2561, cell 204-590-8932, kkehler@spcw.mb.ca
Ontario: Mithilen Mathipalan, Family Service Toronto, Coordinator, Social Action, Ontario Coordinator, Campaign 2000, 416-595-9230 x298, cell 416-666-8491, mithilenma@familyservicetoronto.org
New Brunswick: Randy Hatfield and Heather Atcheson, Human Development Council, 506-634-1673, randy@sjhdc.ca;heather@sjhdc.ca
Nova Scotia: Lauren Matheson, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives-Nova Scotia, Cell 902- 579-9555,lmatheson@policyalternatives.ca
Prince Edward Island: Mary Boyd, 902-969-2693, MaryBoyd@live.ca
Newfoundland and Labrador: Katie Keats, Manager of Fund Development and Communications, Choices for Youth, P: 709-754-0446 ext. 213, Cell 709-597-2401

BACKGROUNDER

Key Findings from the 2023 National Update, Unprecedented Progress on Poverty Reduction Being Undone

  • Over 1 million children lived in poverty (1,162,460 or 15.6%) in 2021.
  • The national child poverty rate increased by 2.1 percentage points between 2020-2021, following a historicreduction of 4.2 percentage points between 2019-2020. This increase represents an additional 163,550 childrenliving in poverty.
  • The child poverty rate is higher (16.1%) for children under six than all children.
  • Rates of child poverty increased in every province and territory, with highest increases in Saskatchewanamongst the provinces (child poverty rate of 24.2%) and Nunavut amongst the territories (child poverty rate of35.8%).
  • The gap between wealthy and low-income families widened, as families in the bottom decile of incomedistribution had only 1.6% of the total share of income compared to families in the top decile, which had 25.4%.
  • Government transfers, such as the Canada Child Benefit (CCB), are powerful poverty reduction tools. The CCBreduced child poverty by 9.2 percentage points in 2021.
  • Child and family poverty disproportionately affects marginalized communities due to the historic and currentviolence of colonialism, racism and systemic discrimination.
  • Canada’s universal childcare plan must include low-income children with a sliding scale fee model of $0 to $10 maximum. All childcare expansion must be within the public and non-profit sectors.

Campaign 2000 is a non-partisan, pan-Canadian network of 120 national, provincial and community partner organizations committed to working to end child and family poverty, hosted by Family Service Toronto. To download 2023 report cards or for more information, please visit http://www.campaign2000.ca.

About the Author

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

Administrator

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg is a participatory arts collective and living lab, based in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. It's a space where innovation and creativity thrive. It's latest iteration was launched in 2021 with funding and support from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. Today, working with students and faculty from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, we fuse traditional and participatory media arts with artificial intelligence, music, storytelling and community-driven, land-based artist residencies to cultivate new voices and bold ideas. Whether through collaborative projects or immersive experiences, our small but vibrant community supports creators to explore, experiment, and connect. Join us at the intersection of artistry, technology, culture and community—where every moment is a new opportunity to create.

Visit Website View All Posts
Tags: Global Dignity Canada SDG 1 SDG 16

Post navigation

Previous: Lucy Eetak
Next: Northern Perspectives conference kicks off in Winnipeg

Related News

Jamie Bell and Tony Eetak, Manitoba-based Indigenous artists, demonstrate their groundbreaking prototype virtual gallery powered by GPT-4 Turbo, less than 24 hours after the model's global release. Developed through OpenAI's prestigious Researcher Access Program, the prototype leverages advanced generative AI and interactive avatars.
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • News
  • Technology

Vibe Coding: Arts and the Algorithm

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg February 28, 2025
From all of us at Arts Borups Corners, Happy New Year!
  • Borups Corners
  • News
  • Winnipeg

Happy New Year!

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg January 1, 2025
Art Borups Corners founding member Tony Eetak is this year's youth artist-in-residence with the Winnipeg-based nonprofit.
  • Arts & Creative Leadership
  • Borups Corners
  • Creative Entrepreneurship
  • News
  • Winnipeg

Exploring Climate Diplomacy Through Art, Storytelling and Creative Leadership

Tony Eetak December 11, 2024

Recent Posts

  • Nature’s Digital Press
  • The quiet of fall
  • Orange Shirt Day
  • Cataloguing Workshop
  • Next stop: Apple Pie
Book cover for Where Dignity Grows, a book of stories about kindness and dignity

You may have missed

Proving that art is everywhere: With nothing more than a scanner and a handful of fallen leaves, participants at The Arts Incubator are discovering the accessible, high-impact possibilities of digital collage.
  • Ontario
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Nature’s Digital Press

Jamie Bell October 1, 2025
4da3225d-77a9-49f1-8cca-218abd06ab95
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

The quiet of fall

Eva Suluk September 30, 2025
national-day-truth-reconciliation
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Orange Shirt Day

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg September 30, 2025
publishing-and-isbns
  • Creative Entrepreneurship
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Cataloguing Workshop

Jamie Bell September 29, 2025

MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Copyright ©2020-2025 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.