Sunday, December 21, 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

N.B. police shooting of Indigenous woman leads to questions on 'wellness checks'

N.B. police shooting of Indigenous woman leads to questions on 'wellness checks'
A 26-year-old Indigenous woman from British Columbia who was fatally shot by police in northwestern New Brunswick was remembered Friday as a caring person as questions were raised about police conduct of so-called "wellness checks."

N.B. police shooting of Indigenous woman leads to questions on 'wellness checks'

James sees 'glimmers of increased confidence' as jobless rate hits 13.4 per cent

James sees 'glimmers of increased confidence' as jobless rate hits 13.4 per cent
British Columbia's jobless rate continues to climb upwards, hitting 13.4 per cent last month, but there are signs of building confidence.

James sees 'glimmers of increased confidence' as jobless rate hits 13.4 per cent

Black Canadians say racism here is just as harmful as in the United States

Black Canadians say racism here is just as harmful as in the United States
The death of George Floyd in Minnesota following a police intervention has spurred massive protests in both Canada and the United States and societal soul-searching on the need to fight racism on both sides of the border.

Black Canadians say racism here is just as harmful as in the United States

Minister says reckoning on police violence against Indigenous people needed

Minister says reckoning on police violence against Indigenous people needed
Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says Canada needs a reckoning over a repeated and disgusting pattern of police violence against Indigenous people. Miller says he "watched in disgust" video and reports this week of violence against a 22-year-old Inuk man in Nunavut and a 26-year-old First Nations mother in New Brunswick.

Minister says reckoning on police violence against Indigenous people needed

Canada unemployment rate hits new record

Canada unemployment rate hits new record
Canada clawed back 289,600 jobs in May as provincial governments began easing public health restrictions and businesses reopened, Statistics Canada said Friday. Still, the unemployment rate in May rose to 13.7 per cent, the highest level in more than four decades of comparable data.

Canada unemployment rate hits new record

Anti-racism protesters march in Toronto; Trudeau calls systemic racism real

Anti-racism protesters march in Toronto; Trudeau calls systemic racism real
The head of Toronto's police service took a public knee on Friday in solidarity with marching anti-racism demonstrators protesting police killings of black people, with similar demonstrations planned in other Canadian cities.

Anti-racism protesters march in Toronto; Trudeau calls systemic racism real