08/01/2025
News release: 10,000 more Canaries in the Social Mine.
July 31, 2025- For immediate release
MONCTON- As New Brunswick prepares to celebrate its provincial day, nearly 100,000 individuals and families relying on the Department of Social Development have little reason to celebrate.
Historically, coal miners brought canaries underground to detect toxic gases,if the bird showed signs of distress, it was a signal to act quickly. Today, our social assistance recipients are the canaries in New Brunswick’s deepening poverty crisis. 10,000 more signs of distress. Rising homelessness, worsening health outcomes, and avoidable deaths are the warning signs we must not ignore.
New Brunswick is facing a growing crisis of poverty, worsening inequality, and a social safety net that no longer meets the basic needs of our most vulnerable. Despite progress made between 2015 and 2021, poverty levels in 2023 have returned to what they were in 2017: 94,000 people, including 21,000 children, now live in poverty. Social assistance caseloads have grown by 10,000 since 2021, erasing a decade of hard-won progress. Every recipient now lives in deep poverty, far below the official poverty line, as measured by the Market Basket Measure.
This crisis has been years in the making. From 2013 to 2023, median income increased by just 11.9%, far below the 28.4% rise in the Consumer Price Index. Meanwhile, social assistance median income actually declined by 3.6%.
Between 2015 and 2024, basic living costs soared: food prices increased by 36.1%, rent jumped 41.9% and electricity rose by 32.7%. Faced with stagnant or shrinking incomes, recipients are forced to choose between paying for food, rent, or electricity.
The gap between rich and poor continues to widen. In 2023, the bottom 20% of earners had just 5.6% of after-tax income, while the top 20% claimed 42.4%. New Brunswick continues to offer some of the lowest social assistance rates in Canada, leaving recipients thousands of dollars below the poverty line.
The New Brunswick Common Front for Social Justice urges the government and all MLAs to take bold, immediate action. The time for symbolic gestures is over. We need concrete measures to reduce poverty, restore dignity, and create a province where no one is left behind. We call on the province to align its actions with the 2030 UN Agenda for Sustainable Development—and build a New Brunswick that works for everyone.
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