Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 challenge unrelenting for B.C. businesses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2021 05:43 PM
  • COVID-19 challenge unrelenting for B.C. businesses

The association representing businesses across Metro Vancouver says the costs of COVID-19 continue to mount for its members.

The Greater Vancouver Board of Trade has released its annual Region in Review report showing pandemic-related challenges obscure the path to economic recovery.

The survey shows many board of trade members have been hit, with 62 per cent still seeing decreased sales, 36 per cent reporting higher operating costs and roughly 30 per cent confirming layoffs or cuts in operating hours to make ends meet.

Seventy per cent of owners say they don't expect normal workplace routines until at least the summer, while 10 per cent predict the majority of their workers may never return to the office.

Although the survey shows 41 per cent of businesses are optimistic about recovery, only 49 per cent expect business as usual when government assistance ends.

The same number predict lower revenues through June, 24 per cent anticipate layoffs and 22 per cent plan to cut hours.

Board president Bridgitte Anderson says the survey reveals many Greater Vancouver businesses are barely treading water as they enter 2021.

"The near-term outlook is uncertain, with many leaders anxious about what the future holds for their businesses," Anderson says in a statement.

"Our entrepreneurs are resilient and are investing and pivoting to digital as they forge a path that will help them not only navigate the pandemic but guide our region to prosperity in the future," she says.

The report is part of the board of trade's 32nd annual Economic Outlook Forum and was compiled from responses by 134 board members to a survey by the Mustel Group between Jan. 5 and 12.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Tories seek Trudeau family's speaking records

Tories seek Trudeau family's speaking records
A second House of Commons committee is debating whether to probe the aborted deal between the federal government and WE Charity to run a massive student-volunteering program.

Tories seek Trudeau family's speaking records

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court
The Supreme Court of Canada has upheld a judge's decision to halt a murder case because of excessive delay, even though the accused man was long ago deported from Canada.

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes
Finance Minister Bill Morneau will outline today how the federal government is reshaping its emergency wage-subsidy program that has been extended to the end of the year.

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital
According to a release from Vancouver Coastal Health an outbreak of COVID-19 has taken place in the NICU at St. Paul's Hospital. The NICU is designed for newborns at the hospital. 

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence
Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a woman travelling on a Surrey bus received multiple threats of sexual violence. According to Transit Police the woman was on a bus that had just departed Newton Exchange with about 15 other passengers on July 14 around 11 pm when she received the threatening messages to her phone via AirDrop.

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record
Another record for monthly overdose deaths related to illicit drugs has been set in British Columbia, prompting the former provincial health officer to call for radical steps to reduce fatalities including access to pharmaceutical-grade heroin produced in Canada.

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record