Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal COVID-19 aid gets last-minute reshape

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Oct, 2021 11:49 AM
  • Federal COVID-19 aid gets last-minute reshape

OTTAWA - Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says the federal government is reshaping a suite of pandemic aid programs for businesses and individuals starting this weekend.

The federal wage and rent subsidies are scheduled to expire on Saturday, along with benefits for some unemployed workers.

Freeland says the measures were always designed to be temporary to get through the crisis.

She says the country is now in a very different phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, noting the labour market has recovered all the jobs lost last year and vaccination rates are rising.

In place of the broad wage and rent subsidies for businesses will be more direct subsidies to still-hurting sectors of the economy.

Mark Agnew, senior vice-president policy with the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, says the retooled government support programs would allow businesses that continue to be impacted by public health restrictions to survive until they can recover.

"This is the fair thing to do for businesses that are playing their part to protect public health," he said in a statement.

Freeland also says income support measures will only go to workers off the job because of a lockdown. She says the new benefit would pay $300 a week to workers subject to a lockdown, including those who are ineligible for employment insurance.

The rate of pay is equal to what the Canada Recovery Benefit has provided to unemployed workers, over two million of whom have used the benefit over the last year and receiving $27 billion in aid.

Freeland says there is still a need for the benefits to help parents stay home to care for a sick child, or to stay home themselves if sick, which is why they will be extended into the new year and individuals will be given two more weeks of eligibility.

She also says the government estimates the cost of the new measures at over $7 billion.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds rejecting more migrants' applications: data

Feds rejecting more migrants' applications: data
The rejection rate for permanent residency applications on humanitarian and compassionate grounds has risen sharply over the past couple of years, according to recently released figures.    

Feds rejecting more migrants' applications: data

Specialized rescue team to recover body

Specialized rescue team to recover body
A statement from the RCMP says the body was found late Tuesday night as members of a specialized urban search and rescue crew from Vancouver were able to enter a building beside the construction site.

Specialized rescue team to recover body

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park
A two-year-old girl is recovering from bite wounds after she was attacked by a coyote while walking through Stanley Park, in Vancouver.

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital
The cost is approximately $860.8 million and will be shared by the provincial government through Vancouver Coastal Health and the Richmond Hospital Foundation.

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver
The makeshift hospital at the Vancouver Convention Centre, which was repurposed with COVID-19 overflow beds, is being shut down without ever taking patients.

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022
TransLink today announced that it will be proceeding with a major upgrade to Burrard SkyTrain Station beginning in early 2022. The project will take approximately two years to complete and will require the closure of the station to allow the work to be done safely and more efficiently than were it to remain partially open during construction.

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022