Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds post non-existent volunteer positions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2020 08:41 PM
  • Feds post non-existent volunteer positions

The federal website advertising volunteer positions for students hoping to earn money for their educations through a $900-million government aid program contains hundreds — if not thousands — of positions that might not actually exist.

Among the student-volunteer positions advertised as available on the I Want to Help website are 1,500 spots with YMCA Canada to help create online exercise regimes for kids and seniors in their communities.

The YMCA says those positions were the brainchild of WE Charity, the organization originally tapped by the Liberal government to administer the Canada Student Services Grant, and that the Y never agreed to host them.

The YMCA and WE both blame a miscommunication as WE scrambled to get the program — through which students can earn up to $5,000 toward their schooling — up and running as quickly as possible.

Yet neither WE nor the federal government have responded to repeated questions about thousands of other positions ostensibly involving the creation of online content or the mentoring other students for which no charity or non-profit is named.

The YMCA, meanwhile, says it is still waiting to hear about 391 other student-volunteer positions that it is ready to host but that have still not been posted on the federal website.

MORE National ARTICLES

Worried for kid's social development amid pandemic? Experts say routine can help

Worried for kid's social development amid pandemic? Experts say routine can help
Justin Kinch would spend his pre-pandemic evenings taking his two young children to local parks in his neighbourhood, introducing them to new cultures and giving them opportunities to play and interact with plenty of other kids.

Worried for kid's social development amid pandemic? Experts say routine can help

Less driving, fewer crashes should bring cheaper insurance

Less driving, fewer crashes should bring cheaper insurance
DETROIT - Those lightly travelled freeways and streets could be putting a few dollar bills into your wallet.

Less driving, fewer crashes should bring cheaper insurance

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about
DELTA, B.C. — Worrying about being infected with COVID-19 at the grocery store where she works has become part of the job for Kelly Ferguson, who lives with her 90-year-old mother.

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie
A retired high-ranking Mountie says the investigation into one of Canada's worst mass killings will tax the resources of the Nova Scotia RCMP. Pierre-Yves Bourduas, a former deputy commissioner, says nothing in his experience compares to what took place last weekend when 23 people were killed in a rampage by a man before he was shot dead by RCMP on Sunday.

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan
This week is usually when kids in the Muslim community get excited about an annual trip to see the full moon that marks the start of Ramadan, says Cindy Jadayel, a member of the Mosque of Mercy in Ottawa. But she says it'll be one of many community events that will be cancelled during Ramadan this year.

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets
COVID-19 is presenting another challenge to Canada's long-running and tumultuous effort to buy new fighter jets. The federal government last summer launched a long-awaited competition to replace the Royal Canadian Air Force's aging CF-18s with 88 new fighter jets at an estimated cost of $19 billion.

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets