Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds spend $50,000 for flag's 50th birthday celebration next month

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2015 11:52 AM
  • Feds spend $50,000 for flag's 50th birthday celebration next month

OTTAWA — The federal government has allotted $50,000 for celebrations for the upcoming 50th birthday of the iconic Maple Leaf flag.

That's compared to almost $4 million for a campaign marking the 200th anniversary of Sir John A. Macdonald's birth, and $5.2 million spent on the bicentennial of the War of 1812.

Canadian Heritage said Thursday that the $50,000 includes funds for promotional material, a photo exhibit during Ottawa's upcoming Winterlude festivities and various "outreach products."

In an email, a spokesman also said the department has provided more than $200,000 to organizations, including provincial lieutenant-governors, for their 50th birthday projects.

By way of contrast, the government announced earlier this week it will spend $1.5 million on a cross-country project to raise awareness about the Holodomor, a state-sponsored famine in Ukraine in 1932-33 in which millions starved while resisting Soviet collectivist policies.

The flag — the brainchild of Liberal prime minister Lester B. Pearson — turns 50 on Feb. 15.

Heritage Minister Shelly Glover wasn't available to comment on complaints from flag historians earlier this week that the government is paying the Maple Leaf short shrift compared with other key milestones in Canadian history.

Liberal MP Mauril Belanger agrees with those who accuse the Conservatives of lacklustre party-planning.

He wrote in an email that he has taken it upon himself to "commemorate this very important anniversary."

Belanger has produced a poster for his riding of Ottawa-Vanier, that will be sent to 14,000 students. It provides historical highlights of how the flag came to be and is available on his website, www.mauril.ca/the-canadian-flag .

"I offered to share the poster with my Liberal colleagues and am delighted that many have picked up the initiative so school students in other parts of the country will also learn how our flag came to be," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

2 Porter Airlines flights diverted Sunday due to smoke inside aircraft

2 Porter Airlines flights diverted Sunday due to smoke inside aircraft
TORONTO — Smoke inside the aircraft caused two Porter Airline fights out of Toronto's Billy Bishop Airport to be diverted Sunday.

2 Porter Airlines flights diverted Sunday due to smoke inside aircraft

Dog mauls B.C. girl who is 16 days old; family agrees to euthanize dog

Dog mauls B.C. girl who is 16 days old; family agrees to euthanize dog
SAANICH, Canada — A dog has mauled a 16-day-old baby girl in the southern Vancouver Island community of Saanich, B.C.

Dog mauls B.C. girl who is 16 days old; family agrees to euthanize dog

No indication any Canadians on board missing flight, foreign affairs says

No indication any Canadians on board missing flight, foreign affairs says
OTTAWA — The Foreign Affairs Department says there's no indication there are any Canadians on board a missing Air Asia flight.

No indication any Canadians on board missing flight, foreign affairs says

Idealism, policy passion prompts hundreds to take political plunge

Idealism, policy passion prompts hundreds to take political plunge
OTTAWA — With 10 months to go until the next scheduled election, federal political parties are busily building the teams of candidates who'll run for them in each of the country's 338 ridings.

Idealism, policy passion prompts hundreds to take political plunge

Hundreds take political plunge, despite cynicism, politicians' bad reputation

Hundreds take political plunge, despite cynicism, politicians' bad reputation
OTTAWA — How many people would fight tooth and nail to get into a profession almost guaranteed to earn them a reputation as self-serving liars and cheats, if not outright crooks?

Hundreds take political plunge, despite cynicism, politicians' bad reputation

From blackouts to oil plunge, a bleak year for Newfoundland and Labrador Tories

From blackouts to oil plunge, a bleak year for Newfoundland and Labrador Tories
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The year 2014 in Newfoundland and Labrador politics started with electricity blackouts that sealed one premier's demise, and ended with a fiscal meltdown that threatens another.

From blackouts to oil plunge, a bleak year for Newfoundland and Labrador Tories