Saturday, May 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Government expects $140M in savings this year with refugee health care co-pay

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2026 09:59 AM
  • Government expects $140M in savings this year with refugee health care co-pay

The government estimates that implementing a co-pay from asylum seekers and refugee claimants for some health care services will cut public costs by about $140 million.

To address a soaring price tag for the Interim Federal Health Program, the government introduced the new co-pay on May 1 for supplementary and prescription health coverage.

Claimants will cover a $4 fee for prescriptions and cover 30 per cent of the cost for services not typically covered by the public health care system, such as dental and vision care.

Data provided by the government in response to an order paper question from NDP MP Heather McPherson shows $93 million in savings will come from dental care.

Routine doctor visits and emergency medicine continue to be fully covered by the program. 

A February report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer projected the cost of the program at $1.1 billion for the 2026/27 fiscal year. 

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Jenny Kane

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian Space Agency's first space to Earth video call with Col. Jeremy Hansen

Canadian Space Agency's first space to Earth video call with Col. Jeremy Hansen
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen connected with Earth from deep space early Saturday morning in a historic first for the Canadian Space Agency, as part of a live question-and-answer session during the Artemis II mission. 

Canadian Space Agency's first space to Earth video call with Col. Jeremy Hansen

More disruptions as BC Ferries vessel sidelined for Metro Vancouver-Sunshine Coast

More disruptions as BC Ferries vessel sidelined for Metro Vancouver-Sunshine Coast
A BC Ferries vessel put back into service Sunday after a longer-than-expected refit was quickly pulled again, adding to disruptions on the busy Easter long weekend.

More disruptions as BC Ferries vessel sidelined for Metro Vancouver-Sunshine Coast

Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast

Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast
Spring weather in British Columbia brought record-high daily temperatures to several communities, while an arriving cold front is expected to bring strong winds to south western parts of the province. 

Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast

Ahead of World Cup, ICE says its agents don’t carry guns in Canada

Ahead of World Cup, ICE says its agents don’t carry guns in Canada
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement says its agents in Canada don’t carry firearms, following questions about a potential ICE presence at upcoming FIFA World Cup games.

Ahead of World Cup, ICE says its agents don’t carry guns in Canada

Race for new Quebec premier heats up as Bernard Drainville gets high-profile support

Race for new Quebec premier heats up as Bernard Drainville gets high-profile support
Three Quebec cabinet ministers are throwing their support behind Bernard Drainville with less than one week to go in the race to replace outgoing Premier François Legault.

Race for new Quebec premier heats up as Bernard Drainville gets high-profile support

Why the Iran war has renewed calls for a sovereign medical supply chain

Why the Iran war has renewed calls for a sovereign medical supply chain
The fallout from the war in the Middle East has led to cuts in helium supplies for health services in at least one province — and experts are warning that Canada still hasn't done enough to secure sovereignty over critical medical supply chains.

Why the Iran war has renewed calls for a sovereign medical supply chain