Started as an observation...
  Originally my comments were fueled by the apparent ingratitude of some people at the ODSP office today. But I realize, there is a ort of social assistance culture of "never enough:"

So today I picked up my new bus pass. The Community Pass. It allows people with disabilties to ride in a very cost-efficient manner. I can certainly support the initiative, trying to get otherwise potentially housebound people out and into the community. Not to mention for people with fixed and low incomes, this makes life more manageable. I had to pay for the new ID, but frankly, the $35 I paid for the ID and the monthly EXPRESS pass was a steal. It made me giddy. Yes, I have had a little extra cash lately, but my contracted just ended and I'm not going to turn down a little extra assistance. As long as the government assesses me to be below the poverty line, I will keep accepting assistance.

But then the buzzkill hit. I had to go to the ODSP office to drop off my forms (you have to do it in person or they get lost. Ask anyone in the system. It's true!). So a woman beside starts a conversation about the new bus pass. She is upset because the office still won't cover the full cost of the bus pass. WHAT? The city puts forth an initiative which makes your bus pass over $40 cheaper, and you're UPSET because someone else isn't picking up the tab?? I has happy I got to save $40 a month. I highly doubt the purpose of the disability program was to cover *everything*. 

When I am not working I have more than enough to pay for food, shelter, internet, TV and basic living. I could make life changes and flip some of that stuff around, or trade cable for a cell phone (you get the idea). I use the STEP program to upgrade that living so that I can go out and stuff. I consider my standard of living to be fully adequate. 

So back to the people in the office. "They don't give me enough to eat" "They don't pay for my satellite dish" "They cut off my cellphone" "they reduced my food allowance under the new system""They don't give me enough for rent". Seriously. The government sets up a program so you won't DIE and you are upset because you can't figure out how to manage on $1000/month (give or take). 

$12,000/year isn't fun to live on, but it's definitely possible to do it.




From: [identity profile] kali-kali.livejournal.com


YES YES YES. I completely agree with a Life Priorities/Money Management course - not just for people on Disability, but for people on Welfare and any other government assistance programs - I'd include OSAP here too, because I don't know where so many students (who get the same full amount of OSAP as I do) always seem to lack money, while I don't, despite getting the same amount of OSAP as them. It is amazing how many people out there don't know how to budget. It may not look to the casual observer that I have a budget, but rest assured I do. It's just very flexible, since I know what my financial situation is for months in advance, so I know how and what I can spend, what my limits are, when I need to make sure I have jobs by during the summer, and so on.

If more people knew how to budget their money properly, everyone would be better off.

From: [identity profile] waterspyder.livejournal.com


Without trying to belittle your experiences, a lot of other students are not receiving the same amount of assistance from their parents as you are. I could have a mistaken impression, but I definitely got the idea that your parents pay for a lot of necessities via your credit card bill and cover your cell phone. It's a lot different knowing that if you run out of money, your parents cannot help you (I did the first three years of my degree without OSAP eligibility or ODSP. If I ran out of money from my full/part-time jobs, I was screwed. It's a great motivator to plan ahead).

Conversely I also know students who have their entire complement of bills paid by their parents for the entirity of their University career and they don't have enough money either.

From: [identity profile] kali-kali.livejournal.com


You do have a mistaken impression. My parents do pay for my cellphone (which is not a necessity anyways), but that is the only regular expense they pay. They pay for products related to my skin sensitivity (about $40 every two months), medications (maybe $30 every six months) and trips home, but other than that, everything is up to me. Anything else I put on my credit card such as Internet purchases, I have to pay them back for. Food, tuition, rent, other expenses... all up to me, via jobs or OSAP.

I've worked out budgets for how to live on strictly OSAP (provided you get the full amount possible), and it is absolutely, perfectly, doable without starving, and with the possibility to eat and live healthily as well, with a few luxuries even. Add in a part-time job and/or minimal parental support, and you're even better off. The key is knowing how to manage it.
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