Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Food surplus program finally rolls out

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2020 06:56 PM
  • Food surplus program finally rolls out

More than 12 million eggs will be redistributed via an emergency federal program designed to help farmers faced with too much food and nowhere to sell it due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau announced Thursday that the government has signed eight agreements worth nearly $50 million to help align the needs of food banks and other community groups with what farmers and producers can supply.

"This is a win-win," she said in a statement.

"Not only are we helping producers who cannot sell their goods to restaurants, but we are also aiding Canadians that have had to seek help from food banks."

The organizations receiving the money include Food Banks Canada, Second Harvest and the Quebec group La Tablee des Chefs.

Altogether, approximately 12 million kilograms of everything from fish to fowl will be redistributed under the $50-million food surplus program announced by the Liberals earlier this year.

The near shutdown of the hospitality industry has meant a sharp decline in the number of places to sell perishable foods.

That has led to litres of milk being dumped down drains, potatoes going bad in storage and farmers facing higher costs to hold on to animals they had nowhere to sell if slaughtered.

At the same time, food banks have reported sharp increases in the number people seeking assistance, having lost their jobs due to the pandemic, and there were calls for the federal government to find a way to match up the two.

The program, heralded as the first of its kind in Canada, was officially launched in June and is now closed to applications.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home
A provincial coroner has announced an inquiry into the death of an Indigenous teen who killed himself near his southern Ontario group home and went undiscovered for seven months.

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

The federal and British Columbia governments are working to arrange meetings with Indigenous leaders in an effort to halt blockades of rail lines that have choked Canada's economy.

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told
A former member of an ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish group north of Montreal has told a courtroom that he graduated from an unlicensed religious school without ever hearing the words "science" or "geography."

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Canada's economy slowed "sharply" in the final quarter of 2019, the parliamentary budget office said Thursday in its February economic and fiscal report.

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement
The Supreme Court of Canada will revisit the decisions of courts in British Columbia and Ontario that said the federal law allowing prolonged solitary confinement in prison was unconstitutional.

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

The New Democrats are asking the provinces to support their promised universal pharmacare legislation, hoping to win premiers over by calling on Ottawa to increase federal health transfers.

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan