Addition: just noticed that it’s a double-post (sorry), you’ll find a thread on this topic already here: https://lemmy.ca/post/17890643

The Ontario basic income pilot project (OBI) was launched by Kathleen Wynne’s Liberal government in 2017 — in Lindsay, Hamilton and Thunder Bay — with the goal of learning how a basic income would affect people’s well-being over a three-year period.

It was axed in the summer the following year, shortly after the Conservatives under Premier Doug Ford came into power.

Since the pilot project ended, the cost of living has continued to climb across Ontario and more people are relying on food banks.

Ontario has indicated it won’t appeal the court’s decision to certify the lawsuit. That means the case has entered the second stage — the common issues trial.

Tracey Mechefske, who goes by Willow, is one of the designated plaintiffs in the class action. She participated in the OBI in Lindsay and said it allowed her to start a skin-care business, Raventree Naturals.

For her, participating in the lawsuit has been a way to channel her anger “in a positive way.”

In the years it’s taken for the lawsuit to be certified, “We’ve had people die by suicide because they were going to be forced back into this hole that they couldn’t get out of,” Mechefske said.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    107 months ago

    This is the first I’ve heard of the pilot project, and it pisses me off. Someone finally said ‘screw opinions, let’t find out empirically whether ubi works or not’, and conservatives reply with ‘we don’t need no facts. We already know!’