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Transit for Teens

July 07, 2025

Transit for Teens is a youth-led campaign calling on the BC government to expand the Get on Board program to provide free transit for all youth up to age 18 across every transit system in the province. Mobility is essential for teens to access school, work, community, and support services—no youth should be left behind because their families can’t afford a bus pass. Transit for Teens supports a universal, equitable approach to youth transit that supports access to education, well-being, and sustainable climate futures. 

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$10-a-Day for All

July 07, 2025

Our $10-a-Day for All advocacy supports the completion of BC’s $10-a-Day childcare system to ensure adequate, quality childcare and before-and-after school care for all children in BC. $10-a-Day for All is mobilized and led by families, parents, and caregivers impacted by a lack of access to childcare. Our A Whole Life: The Impact of $10-a-Day Child Care on the Health and Well-being of Low-Income Lone Mothers report reveals that while $10-a-day child care is life-changing for low-income lone mothers in BC, access remains limited and uneven.

Low-income families lucky enough to secure a space report better health, stability, and well-being, but too many are still left out due to scarce availability and inequitable rollout, creating a ‘lottery’ when it comes to $10-a-day spaces in BC. Our data revealed that $10-a-Day childcare enables lone mothers and low-income parents to lift themselves out of poverty. We advocate for the Province to complete the roll-out of BC’s promised universal, accessible $10-a-day system and provide equitable, accessible, quality spaces throughout BC—for all families, not just a few.

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Kindergarten to Grade 12 Without Racism

July 07, 2025

Kindergarten to Grade 12 Without Racism is a parent-led community engagement and law reform project funded by the Law Foundation of BC. The project addresses systemic racism in multiple areas of BC’s public education system. Led by racialized and Indigenous parents with lived experience, the project engages parents and caregivers in communities across the province to gather data on the impact of racism in schools and mobilize evidence-based, parent-led policy and legislative change related to BC’s Anti-Racism Act. Through community-led research, advocacy, and strategic partnerships, the project seeks to reform BC’s School Act to ensure every child and youth can learn in an environment free from the harm of racism.

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Trauma-Informed Family Law Legal Aid Services

July 07, 2025

Our work to establish enhanced, expanded trauma-informed family law legal aid services through Legal Aid BC builds on the outcomes of our charter challenge on access to legal aid, which ended in February 2024 with a collaborative agreement and a three-year implementation period. This project supports the Centre for Family Equity's work to support and impact the development and implementation of BC’s new trauma-informed family law legal aid clinic model.

Informed by the collaborative LABC and CFE engagement with 71 survivors and hundreds of stakeholders across the province regarding the development of the clinic model and the results shared in the Family Law Legal Aid Engagement Safe, Heard, Protected: What We Heard Report, our initiative focuses on three core areas:

  • Implementing best practices in trauma-informed legal aid in BC, particularly in the new clinic model.
  • Fostering collaboration and ongoing, supported input across the legal and non-profit sectors to shape and inform the implementation of the new clinic model.
  • Ensuring survivor perspectives help shape and evaluate the new services. 
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Child, Youth, and Family-Friendly Transit Systems

July 07, 2025

BC’s transit systems must be safe, accessible, and family-supporting systems that get all families everywhere they need to go. Our Child, Youth and Family Friendly Transit Systems advocacy aims to ensure transit systems in BC are built to meet the needs of all families and youth, particularly those impacted by homelessness, stigma, low-income, and remote, underserved locations. Our vision for Child, Youth, and Family-Friendly Transit Systems includes the implementation of Transit for Teens in Budget 2026.

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Mobilizing Justice for Youth Case Study

July 07, 2025

Our Mobilizing Justice for Youth research project aims to understand how mobility poverty—limited access to affordable transit—affects at-risk, low-income youth aged 13-18 in BC. Building on our previous initiatives such as the City of Vancouver’s Reduced Fare Transit Pilot Project and our Transit for Teens engagement, this case study funded by the University of Toronto Scarborough’s Mobilizing Justice initiative, will explore the transportation challenges faced by youth in the Lower Mainland and rural areas, especially those living in poverty, in foster care, experiencing homelessness, and facing marginalization.

This participatory research will engage youth researchers with lived experiences to gather data through interviews and focus groups. Youth participants are compensated, and all data collection will be confidential. We're inviting youth from Metro Vancouver and the Interior of BC who meet the eligibility criteria to get involved and share their experiences.

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Mental Health Matters

July 07, 2025

Our Mental Health Matters initiative daylights the mental health challenges of low-income parents and caregivers, many of whom are survivors of gender-based and family violence, who cannot access expensive market-based counselling support. Mental Health Matters advocates for the inclusion of counselling as a fully MSP-billable service within BC’s health care system with a minimum of 24 hours of counselling per year, per person, for low-income individuals and more funding for mental health services for family violence survivors.

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Constitutional Challenge on Legal Aid Access

July 07, 2025

In 2017, we joined a charter challenge alongside individual litigants challenging the Province of BC and Legal Aid BC, arguing that a lack of access to legal aid discriminates against women and children in poverty who are fleeing violent relationships. Under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, we asserted that BC was not upholding its constitutional duty to provide adequate access to justice for vulnerable women fleeing abuse. A lack of legal aid increases their vulnerability to further violence and stress.

Since we were founded in 2014, we’ve listened to the struggles of women facing violence, poverty, and inadequate legal support, and we remain committed to protecting their rights. In February 2024, the Province announced a comprehensive collaborative agreement between Centre for Family Equity, the Ministry of the Attorney General, and Legal Aid BC, which marked the end of the case and the beginning of foundational system transformation in family law legal aid in BC.

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