Halton Hills Newspapers

Halton Hills This Week (Georgetown, ON), 21 August 1993, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Sateen Tne Sto "PERFORMANCE COUNTS!" 877-5165 Tor. 874-3040 Res. 877-7578 * Sales Representative by Stephanie Henderson Special to HHTW If current trends continue, Halton’s social services department could go over bud- get by as much as $150,000 to maintain the region’s welfare Tolls this year. Although the number of people receiving assistance dropped slightly last month, net welfare costs for the first six months of 1993 exceeded budgeted forecasts by $56,000, according to social services commissioner Bonnie Ewart. She said there were 1,000 more cases than expected for that period. In a report to the region’s health and social services com- mittee, Ewart noted a possible OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, AUG. 22 12:00 - 2:00 PM 45 Stockman Crescent Georgetown ie $203,000 COUNTRY SQUIRE WITH INGROUND POOL! =TOTALLY 2 BDRM. IN LAW RAISED BUNGALOW OVERSIZED GARAGE UPGRADED...BETTER HURRY! 3 BEDROOM, FIREPLACE COUNTRY LOCATION! CAPE COD COSY 3 BDRM. INGROUND POOL MEAGAN MEADOWS 4 BEDROOM 2x6 CONSTRUCTION HOME GLEN WILLIAMS LOCATION! QUALITY CONSTRUCTION! ERFORMANCE | Ar BgPRESIDENTS A market analysis CIRCLE! of your home! Call for a complete and accurate ON CALL BRENDA PAYT variance” of between $60,000 and $150,000 for the department by the end of the year. That money would have to come from the region’s cof- fers, she confirmed recently. The province pays 80 per cent of the budgeted social assis- tancé bill, with regional municipalities owing the remainder. In July and August, the social services department implemented a number of Provincially mandated steps to toughen welfare eligibility cri- teria, Ata recent committee meet- ing, income maintenance director Janet Menard said 41 families dropped off the wel- fare roll in July after letters were sent to 700 Halton fami- lies informing them of the new eligibility rules. Menard also said casework- er overload is contributing to abuse of the system. The tegion’s one eligibility review officer only investigates poten- tial cheaters when tipped off | Social Services in the rec a explained. Ewart said more safegu: are expected in the future. The budgetary prob! hardly comes as a shock, noted. caseworker, “We’ve operated wit deficit the last couple of ye because we’ve used conset tive versus generous forec The deficit this year is I than in the past, but it’s s not good.” The dramatic swelling of welfare rolls in recent ye appears to be ebbing. WE welfare caseloads hi increased by 226 per cent si 1989, caseload growth t year slowed to 3.3 per c between January and Jui compared with a 34 per c increase for the same peri last year. In July, 195 reci ents withdrew from the pi gram. | CAN OFFER YOU ONE-STOP SHOPPING . DAVE KRAUSE* LET ME HELP YOU FIND A HOME AND ARRANGE ALL OF YOUR FINANCING As a licensed real estate agent and a licensed mortgage consultant, | can save you time and money Eyes * Sales Rep. the y serving you in both capacities. > VACANT LAND FOR SALE garage. Call Dave Krause* to view. suite potential. Upgraded washrooms, central air, double car EXCELLENT VALUE Two storey brick home set on 1.1 acres of treed| seclusion & privacy featuring main floor F/R with F/P, large eat-in kitchen, 6x30 sunporch, paved drive & |double car garage. Priced at $197,900. _ CW93-105) oom and master "PERFORMANCE COUNTS!’ Not intended to solicit properties already listed for sale POWER OF AFFORDABLE Large sidesplit featuring eat-in kitchen, good size living- bedroom, large rec room with brick fire- yncept, pine floors, F/P in place and walkout to backyard, large lot (181x100), dou- ble car garage. Call Dave Krause' to view. CW93-109| | 73-0977,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy