Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

$60M back-to-school fund for B.C. families

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Aug, 2022 02:35 PM
  • $60M back-to-school fund for B.C. families

BURNABY, B.C. - British Columbia is looking to ease the burden of back-to-school costs with a one-time $60-million fund that expands meal programs and helps families pay for supplies and field trips.

Education Minister Jennifer Whiteside says families are already struggling with rising costs due to inflation and the government's fund aims to take the sting out of costs associated with the return to school next month.

Whiteside says every school district in the province will receive a minimum of $250,000.

The president of B.C.'s Confederation of Advisory Councils says the affordability initiative will allow individual schools and school districts to provide relief to families in need.

Chris Schultz-Lorentzen says families will be encouraged to reach out to their advisory councils and school principals to get a share of the funding.

Whiteside says the fund is one of a number of measures the government will deliver in the coming days to help people hardest hit by inflation.

MORE National ARTICLES

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia
Freeland says she spoke with her G7 counterparts this morning, joined by Ukraine's "tired but determined" finance minister, who assured them his country would win the war as he spoke from a windowless room furnished with a spartan cot and a blue and yellow flag taped to the wall.

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc
Dr. Bonnie Henry says a decline in hospitalizations, immunity from vaccination and the availability of at-home rapid tests point the way forward to normal activities like high school graduations that youth in particular need to feel connected to others.

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc

466 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

466 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are 523 individuals hospitalized with COVID-19 and 83 are in intensive care. In the past 24 hours, no new deaths have been reported, for an overall total of 2,873.

466 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Closing arguments underway in B.C. clerk case

Closing arguments underway in B.C. clerk case
Brock Martland made the allegation as he began closing arguments in the Crown's case against Craig James, who has pleaded not guilty to two counts of fraud over $5,000 and three counts of breach of trust.

Closing arguments underway in B.C. clerk case

Vancouver police have charged a man following an alleged carjacking in a westside neighbourhood.

Vancouver police have charged a man following an alleged carjacking in a westside neighbourhood.
They say a 58-year-old woman was allegedly forced out of her car Sunday morning in Fairview. They say officers found the car and the suspect soon after in Strathcona.

Vancouver police have charged a man following an alleged carjacking in a westside neighbourhood.

Canada expected to see 'temperature roller-coaster Spring-Forecast

Canada expected to see 'temperature roller-coaster Spring-Forecast
Sherilee Harper of the University of Alberta and one of the 330 authors of the summary report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, there will be impacts on human health and well-being. She says fleeing wildfires and flooding caused by climate change imposes mental-health costs.

Canada expected to see 'temperature roller-coaster Spring-Forecast