Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Five Things To Know About Ottawa's COVID-19 Financial Aid Package

Darpan News Desk, 18 Mar, 2020 07:00 PM

    OTTAWA - Five things to know about Ottawa's $82-billion financial-aid package announced Wednesday to help weather the COVID-19 pandemic:

     

    New emergency benefits

     

    Ottawa is waiving the one-week waiting period to claim employment insurance sickness benefits. The government is also proposing a new emergency care benefit of up to $900 every two weeks for up to 15 weeks to help workers who are quarantined or sick with COVID-19 or taking take of a sick family member, but do not qualify for employment insurance sickness benefits. The new benefit will also be available for parents who can't earn employment income because they need to care for children, whether or not the parents qualify for employment insurance.

     

    Increased benefits and top-ups

     

    The government is moving to make a special one-time payment to those who receive the goods and services tax credit that will double the maximum annual payment amounts for the 2019-20 benefit year. The government is also proposing to increase the maximum annual Canada Child Benefit payment amounts for the 2019-20 benefit year by $300 per child.

     

    Help for businesses

     

    The government wants to provide eligible small employers a temporary wage 10 per cent wage subsidy for three months. The payment will be up to a maximum subsidy of $1,375 per employee and $25,000 per employer. Companies eligible will include those eligible for the small business deduction, as well as non-profit organizations and charities.

     

    Tax delays

     

    The Canada Revenue is pushing back the income-tax filing deadline for individuals until June 1. For trusts with a taxation year the same as the calendar year the filing date will be deferred to May 1. The agency will also allow all businesses to defer, until after Aug. 31, 2020, income-tax payments on amounts that become owing between now and September 2020. No interest or penalties will accumulate on these amounts during this period.

     

    Other targeted aid

     

    The government is providing $305 million for a new distinctions-based Indigenous community support fund for First Nations, Inuit, and Metis Nation communities. It is also placing a six-month interest-free moratorium on the repayment of Canada Student Loans. The required minimum withdrawals from Registered Retirement Income Funds are being cut by 25 per cent for 2020.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Man Charged With Conspiracy To Murder Couple Living In Jamaica

    AJAX, Ont. - Police say a man from southern Ontario has been arrested after he allegedly plotted to murder a couple living in Jamaica.    

    Ontario Man Charged With Conspiracy To Murder Couple Living In Jamaica

    British Government Denies Reports That A Child-murderer Will Be Sent To Canada

    A media report that Britain is considering sending a child-murderer to Canada is false, the British Justice Ministry said Tuesday.

    British Government Denies Reports That A Child-murderer Will Be Sent To Canada

    Joshua Boyle's Lawyers Want Charge Of Misleading Police Thrown Out

    Lawyers for former Afghanistan hostage Joshua Boyle want a judge to toss out a charge that he misled police — one of several criminal counts he faces in Ontario court.

    Joshua Boyle's Lawyers Want Charge Of Misleading Police Thrown Out

    Quebec Woman Waiting For News Of Her Parents Trapped In Bahamas During Hurricane

    MONTREAL - A Montreal-area woman says she's desperately waiting for news of her parents, who were trapped in the northern Bahamas when Hurricane Dorian battered the region as a massive Category 5 storm.    

    Quebec Woman Waiting For News Of Her Parents Trapped In Bahamas During Hurricane

    33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident

    33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident
    RCMP in British Columbia are searching for a man, presumed drowned, following a boating incident on Shuswap Lake east of Kamloops.

    33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident

    New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash

    New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash
    Police in New Brunswick say they're considering charges against a 28-year-old student after the car he was driving crashed, resulting in the deaths of three young men in the back seat.

    New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash