Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Government looking at changes to oft-criticized northern food subsidy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2015 10:43 AM

    OTTAWA — It appears the Conservative government is open to the idea of changing the way it tries to offset the high cost of food in the North.

    The department that oversees the beleaguered Nutrition North program has posted a notice of proposed procurement, asking for someone to come up with different ways of providing northerners with the federal food subsidy.

    "The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development has a requirement to develop subsidy models and support an engagement with communities for the Nutrition North Canada Program in 2015-16," it says.

    The notice, posted Monday, did not elaborate on the nature of any possible changes to Nutrition North.

    Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt's office did not answer specific questions about the notice. Instead, spokeswoman Andrea Richer sent a generic, four-line response that mentioned the amount of money the government is spending on Nutrition North and the work of its advisory board.

    "We are also working with the Nutrition North Canada advisory board to engage with northerners, retailers and suppliers on ideas to keep the program on a sustainable path including increased operating efficiencies and other program improvement proposals," Richer wrote in an email.

    "These suggestions will be used to develop a range of options to help the program stay on a sustainable path while increasing healthy food consumption in the North."

    Nutrition North — which replaced the old Food Mail program in 2011 — is intended to help defray the cost of nutritious food in the North by providing retailers with a subsidy that they are supposed to pass on by cutting food costs for consumers.

    But the $60-million annual food subsidy — to which the government recently added another $11.3 million for the program's 2014-15 budget and a five per cent annual escalator in future years — has been under scrutiny ever since auditor general Michael Ferguson's fall report in November.

    The audit revealed that Aboriginal Affairs is largely in the dark about whether Nutrition North actually does anything for the people who need it the most. That's partly because the department has not required merchants to report their profit margins, which over time would indicate whether the full subsidy is being passed on to consumers.

    Ferguson's team also heard that sometimes the subsidy exceeds the very shipping costs it is meant to defray.

    The department now says that as of April 1, retailers will have to provide information on their current and long-term profit margins.

    The audit also flagged another glaring problem with the subsidy.

    Nutrition North gives retailers a subsidy based on the weight of eligible foods shipped to eligible communities. However, the auditor general found Aboriginal Affairs choose eligible communities based not on need, but on whether they had year-round road access and if they had used the Food Mail program.

    Aboriginal Affairs told Ferguson's team it has looked at expanding the full subsidy to around 50 fly-in northern communities, but doing so would increase the cost of the program by $7 million a year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'
    TORONTO — The man who killed two people at the Toronto Eaton Centre admitted this morning to regularly breaching his bail conditions.

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'

    Jian Ghomeshi Granted Bail After Being Charged With Sexual Assault

    Jian Ghomeshi Granted Bail After Being Charged With Sexual Assault
    TORONTO — Former CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi has been granted bail just hours after being charged with multiple counts of sexual assault.

    Jian Ghomeshi Granted Bail After Being Charged With Sexual Assault

    Thousands Hold Vigil In Toronto For Slain Ferguson Black Teenager

    Thousands Hold Vigil In Toronto For Slain Ferguson Black Teenager
    TORONTO — Thousands braved freezing temperatures in Toronto on Tuesday night to hold a vigil for Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager slain by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August.

    Thousands Hold Vigil In Toronto For Slain Ferguson Black Teenager

    Brother Says Rob Ford Needs More Treatment

    Brother Says Rob Ford Needs More Treatment
    TORONTO - Rob Ford's brother says the outgoing Toronto mayor will need a fifth round of chemotherapy for a rare and aggressive cancer in his abdomen.

    Brother Says Rob Ford Needs More Treatment

    Alberta Stays In Black Despite Oil Free Fall

    Alberta Stays In Black Despite Oil Free Fall
    Finance Minister Robin Campbell says in his second-quarter update that the forecast budget surplus for this fiscal year has been revised downward to $933 million.

    Alberta Stays In Black Despite Oil Free Fall

    Canada Post On Track To Profit In 2014, Earned $22m In Third Quarter

    Canada Post On Track To Profit In 2014, Earned $22m In Third Quarter
    Despite more people still choosing email over snail mail, the Canada Post Group of Companies says it's on track to earn a profit this year despite an earlier forecast for a multimillion-dollar loss.

    Canada Post On Track To Profit In 2014, Earned $22m In Third Quarter