Friday, January 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. auditor outlines cost of pandemic response

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2020 07:38 PM
  • B.C. auditor outlines cost of pandemic response

A new report from British Columbia's auditor general says the largest amount the provincial government had allocated by mid-August in its pandemic response was for individuals and households.

Michael Pickup's report says of the $2.6 billion his office has identified as being allocated by the government as of Aug. 18, $1.9 billion was targeted at individuals and households.

Another $642 million was for critical services, and $100 million was allocated for business and industry.

The government has announced a $5-billion COVID-19 response and a $1-billion contribution to a federal cost-sharing program.

About $3.5 billion was set aside for individuals and households, critical services, and business and industry, and the auditor general's office identified allocations totalling about $2.6 billion.

Finance Minister Carole James is also expected to announce next week how the province will spend a further $1.5 billion set aside for economic recovery.

Pickup says his report does not identify how much has been spent, but lists money that has been allocated for a specific purpose.

The auditor says his office also identified about $1.6 billion in other financial relief measures, as well as billions in deferrals by the province.

Those include:

— $914 million in revenue reductions.

— $500 million for a one-time tax credit under the province's climate change plan.

— $6 billion in deferrals, which includes the postponement of fees, taxes or bills for businesses and individuals.

Pickup says his office has not audited any of the relief programs, but it could do so in the future.

"Because of the unprecedented nature of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the economic decline caused by the pandemic, British Columbia's path to economic recovery is largely unknown," the report says.

"One driver of this uncertainty is what the impact of a second wave of COVID-19 will be and what measures will need to be taken to keep the people of British Columbia safe."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Little League club missing nearly $230,000

B.C. Little League club missing nearly $230,000
A little league baseball club in Metro Vancouver says it has contacted RCMP after discovering hundreds of thousands of dollars missing from its accounts.

B.C. Little League club missing nearly $230,000

Grizzly attacks cyclist on remote B.C. trail

Grizzly attacks cyclist on remote B.C. trail
A grizzly bear attacked a man who was mountain biking Sunday in a remote area of British Columbia's interior.

Grizzly attacks cyclist on remote B.C. trail

Heat grips parts of southern B.C. for another day

Heat grips parts of southern B.C. for another day
Environment Canada is forcasting another day of sizzling heat through much of British Columbia's southern Interior, Okanagan and Fraser Canyon.

Heat grips parts of southern B.C. for another day

Health alert in northern B.C. after COVID exposure

Health alert in northern B.C. after COVID exposure
The health authority in northern British Columbia has issued an alert after more than a dozen people tested positive for COVID-19.

Health alert in northern B.C. after COVID exposure

A guide to back-to-school rules across the country

A guide to back-to-school rules across the country
British Columbia has laid out its plan for studies to resume in "learning groups" this fall. School districts are to post final back-to-school details online by Aug. 26.

A guide to back-to-school rules across the country

WATCH: Surrey man murders an Indian woman, BC numbers rising, US needs to do better

WATCH: Surrey man murders an Indian woman, BC numbers rising, US needs to do better
A gruesome murder by a Surrey man results in the death of property manager Rama Gauravarapu.

WATCH: Surrey man murders an Indian woman, BC numbers rising, US needs to do better