Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

CERB repayment demand scrapped for some

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2021 07:05 PM
  • CERB repayment demand scrapped for some

Thousands of Canadians told they'd have to repay federal emergency benefits are getting reprieves.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says those who applied for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit based on their net incomes, not their gross, won't have to cut the government a cheque.

Thousands of repayment letters went out last year to self-employed Canadians.

They'd been told that to qualify for the CERB they had to have earned at least $5,000 in 2019 or in the 12 months before they applied.

But how to calculate that income became a sticking point, with confusion over whether it meant income before or after expenses were deducted.

In turn, upwards of 400,000 people were told they'd have to repay because they weren't in fact eligible for them.

MORE National ARTICLES

Speed up vaccines, Trudeau to tell provinces

Speed up vaccines, Trudeau to tell provinces
Concerns have emerged, however, that the payment of up to $1,000 is being claimed by people who are quarantining because they travelled outside the country.

Speed up vaccines, Trudeau to tell provinces

Vancouver home sales surge 53.4% in December

Vancouver home sales surge 53.4% in December
Vancouver real estate agents sold 1,026 detached homes, a 71.3 jump from December 2019. The board says the composite home price in Vancouver ended the year at $1,047,400, up 5.4 per cent from the same time last year.

Vancouver home sales surge 53.4% in December

Powerful wind storm buffets coastal B.C

Powerful wind storm buffets coastal B.C
Environment Canada's weather office says gusts of up to 120 km/h are possible in northern regions before easing by noon while winds of 70 to 90 km/h are forecast to hit the south coast by midday.

Powerful wind storm buffets coastal B.C

B.C.'s top doctor announces vaccination plan

B.C.'s top doctor announces vaccination plan
Henry says homeless people using shelters and health-care workers including family doctors will be given priority for shots.

B.C.'s top doctor announces vaccination plan

COVID-19 rules 'fraught' with ambiguity: judge

COVID-19 rules 'fraught' with ambiguity: judge
Justice Nigel Kent says public health orders designed to reduce the spread of COVID-19 aren't clear and "provide very limited express direction" to families that are navigating co-parenting responsibilities.

COVID-19 rules 'fraught' with ambiguity: judge

Housing market assessments show 'resilience'

Housing market assessments show 'resilience'
Most areas had single-digit price increases with the exception of Vancouver and Squamish, which saw an average boost of 10 per cent for single-family homes.

Housing market assessments show 'resilience'