Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Service BC Centres Remain Open, Ready To Serve Citizens

23 Mar, 2020 07:41 PM

    To align with recommendations from the provincial health officer, Service BC is taking action to limit the risk of exposure to the COVID-19 virus for citizens and staff.

     

    Service BC centres are remaining open throughout the province to connect people to core services and supports during this uncertain time. In order to ensure people’s health and safety, staff at Service BC centres are taking extra steps to regularly sanitize public and office spaces, and are modifying reception areas to support social distancing.


    During the first hour of business, vulnerable citizens – including seniors and people who have underlying health conditions or compromised immune systems – will now receive priority service by calling their local Service BC centre to make an appointment.


    Many government organizations are modifying their face-to-face supports due to the pandemic. Service BC is working closely with its partner agencies to identify the core programs and services that will continue to be available at Service BC centres. These include:


    income assistance and disability assistance;

    residential tenancy;

    BC Services Card;

    drivers’ licensing;

    Affordable Child Care Benefit;

    Medical Services Plan (MSP); and

    forest-worker support programs.


    A full list of available services at each Service BC centre is available online, along with information on hours of operation at each site. In addition to physical offices around the province, Service BC supports citizens through online, telephone and text channels.


    People are asked to call a Service BC centre, rather than coming in to an office, if:

    they are showing symptoms of COVID-19, including coughing, shortness of breath and fever;

    they have a sick family member or have been around someone who is sick; and/or

    they have not yet completed the 14-day isolation period after traveling abroad.

    Adapting its approach will help Service BC support its employees, while also ensuring that citizens throughout B.C. – especially those most vulnerable – continue to have access to the core services they need most.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Permanent Guardianship: Another Option For Creating Family

    Merissa Giesbrecht and her husband Jason never imagined that their path to finally having the family they had dreamed about would arrive through a distant relative.    

    Permanent Guardianship: Another Option For Creating Family

    ‘100% Preventable’: B.C. Police Launch Counterattack Against Impaired Holiday Drivers

    Impaired driving remains a leading cause of fatal car crashes, with an average of 68 lives lost every year in B.C.

    ‘100% Preventable’: B.C. Police Launch Counterattack Against Impaired Holiday Drivers

    ICBC Provides Drive Smart Tips For Holiday Shopping Season

    ICBC receives hundreds of thousands of claims every year, with vehicle damage costs totaling $1.33 billion in 2018 alone.

    ICBC Provides Drive Smart Tips For Holiday Shopping Season

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment
    In a video released yesterday, the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the Customs and Immigration Union (PSAC-CIU) outline several cases which have gone unaddressed by CBSA.

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis
    Vancouver City Council has approved a series of recommendations that will enable rental apartments to be developed faster, and in more areas of the city. 

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax Increasing By 25%

    The City of Vancouver will be raising its empty homes tax by 25 per cent for each of the next three years in an effort to tackle a crisis in the lack of long-term rental housing.    

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax Increasing By 25%