Thursday, May 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2020 10:07 PM
  • Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

The federal Liberals and Alberta's United Conservatives have agreed on a one-year extension to child-care funding that will also help offset costs related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

For Alberta, the one-year deal will mean more than $45 million this fiscal year to create new licensed child-care spaces through capital and program grants and subsidies for more lower-income families.

The provincial government is also planning to use $4.7 million of the funding for training.

The province says there is $10 million leftover in funding from its previous deal with Ottawa that is being rolled over to help centres offset costs associated with COVID-19 closures and reopening to help programs remain financially viable.

The money is part of a 10-year, $7-billion funding pledge the Trudeau Liberals unveiled in 2017 — not the $625-million, eight-month pledge the Liberals have made under a "safe restart" agreement with provinces.

Money to provinces flows through one-on-one agreements that originally lasted three years, worth about $1.2 billion in federal funding.

Both levels of government planned to signed renewed deals this year, but that was before the pandemic struck.

All parties agreed to roll over the funding for another year to buy more time for longer-term deals, meaning Ottawa would ship about $400 million to provinces this fiscal year.

Social Development Minister Ahmed Hussen is scheduled to make an announcement Friday morning in Ottawa about the "safe restart" money.

Earlier this week, Hussen told The Canadian Press the pandemic money for child care matched what provinces, territories and child-care experts pitched to help the sector manage the immediate costs of COVID-19.

He added the pandemic money will be aimed at helping daycares pay for protectiv

MORE National ARTICLES

Shooting at a South Vancouver home leaves one man injured

Shooting at a South Vancouver home leaves one man injured
A shooting in South Vancouver on Wednesday night close to Main Street has left a man injured.  Vancouver police officers were at the scene near East 53 Avenue and Sophia Street around 9:45pm Wednesday. 

Shooting at a South Vancouver home leaves one man injured

Teck swings to $149-million Q2 loss

Teck swings to $149-million Q2 loss
Teck Resources Ltd. is reporting a second-quarter loss attributable to shareholders of $149 million on a big drop in revenues due to weaker demand and resource prices during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Teck swings to $149-million Q2 loss

Vancouver votes to end police street checks

Vancouver votes to end police street checks
Councillors in Vancouver have voted unanimously to ban officers from conducting street checks, the process of arbitrarily demanding and recording identification, outside of a police investigation.

Vancouver votes to end police street checks

Surrey RCMP is seeking the public's help in locating a missing wanted man

Surrey RCMP is seeking the public's help in locating a missing wanted man
Surrey RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in locating a man wanted on warrants of arrest. 22-year-old Naseem Mohammed is currently wanted on warrants for being unlawfully at large, resisting/obstructing police, breach of release order, and driving while prohibited.

Surrey RCMP is seeking the public's help in locating a missing wanted man

Surrey RCMP arrest 12 men filming a Tik Tok video and having replica guns

Surrey RCMP arrest 12 men filming a Tik Tok video and having replica guns
Surrey RCMP say they arrested a dozen men who were filming a TikTok video Tuesday after witnesses reported seeing one of them with a weapon in the group. The police were called to Mud Bay Park around 7 in the evening after they heard a man with a gun had put another man in a headlock and dragged him into the bushes.

Surrey RCMP arrest 12 men filming a Tik Tok video and having replica guns

COVID worse at for-profit LTC homes: study

COVID worse at for-profit LTC homes: study
For-profit long-term care homes in Ontario saw significantly worse outbreaks of COVID-19 and more related deaths than their non-profit or municipally run counterparts, according to a new study released on Wednesday.

COVID worse at for-profit LTC homes: study