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

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest
Some Facebook employees critical of CEO Mark Zuckerberg protested his decision not to do anything about incendiary posts that President Trump had placed on the giant social media platform over the past week.

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest

Autopsy commissioned by George Floyd's family shows that he passed away due to asphyxiation

Autopsy commissioned by George Floyd's family shows that he passed away due to asphyxiation
An autopsy on George Floyd's body commissioned by his family determined that "asphyxiation from sustained pressure was the cause" of Floyd's death in an incident that has sparked tense protests and violence across the nation.

Autopsy commissioned by George Floyd's family shows that he passed away due to asphyxiation

Beijing could bar exit of dual Canadians from Hong Kong amid protests: lawyer

Beijing could bar exit of dual Canadians from Hong Kong amid protests: lawyer
A Canadian legal activist is warning the federal government to grant asylum to democracy activists in Hong Kong and expanded settlement to those with links to Canada before China prevents them from leaving.

Beijing could bar exit of dual Canadians from Hong Kong amid protests: lawyer

Metro Vancouver transit police ask for help to identify hate crime suspect

Metro Vancouver transit police ask for help to identify hate crime suspect
Transit police in Metro Vancouver are asking for help as they try to identify a woman suspected of ridiculing and then punching a teenage girl in an apparent hate crime last month.

Metro Vancouver transit police ask for help to identify hate crime suspect

B.C. offers small business eviction protection, urges landlord participation

B.C. offers small business eviction protection, urges landlord participation
Small businesses in British Columbia will be protected from eviction for at least the next month by an emergency government order that aims to encourage landlords to apply for a federal rent relief program.

B.C. offers small business eviction protection, urges landlord participation

Worker killed in CN Rail yard in Surrey, B.C.

Worker killed in CN Rail yard in Surrey, B.C.
Canadian National Railway confirms one of its employees has been killed while performing switching operations in a rail yard in Surrey, B.C.

Worker killed in CN Rail yard in Surrey, B.C.