Close X
Monday, September 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Details released on $19B in anti-COVID-19 funding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2020 06:13 PM
  • Details released on $19B in anti-COVID-19 funding

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau released details Wednesday of how provinces and territories will spend the $19 billion the federal government is giving them to safely restart the economy.

The details are in letters each premier has sent outlining how they intend to spend the money.

Among other things, the funding will help increase testing and contact tracing, support the health care system, help municipalities deliver essential services like public transit and ensure a secure supply of personal protective equipment for frontline workers.

The money will also go towards increasing safe child-care spaces and income support for workers without paid sick leave.

Trudeau released the details just as he wrapped up two and a half days of cabinet meetings aimed at plotting a course through the COVID-19 health crisis.

Bold talk of an audacious plan to rebuild the battered economy gave way during the meetings to the more immediate challenge of confronting the potential for a second deadly wave of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

Cases of COVID-19 have been on the rise across the country for the past several weeks.

Consequently, ministers have been focused almost exclusively on how to protect the health of Canadians and avert the potential for another economy-ravaging, nation-wide shutdown like the one that threw millions of Canadians out of work last spring.

The pandemic has already upended the government's plans to deliver on platform commitments upon which the Liberals won re-election just last fall, when the climate change crisis was at the top of their agenda.

Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna, who formerly led the Liberal charge against climate change, says the government has not forgotten the crisis even if the pandemic has shoved it to the sidelines for the moment.

MORE National ARTICLES

ICBC launches online booking system for office driver licensing appointments

ICBC launches online booking system for office driver licensing appointments
Starting today, ICBC is moving to an appointment-based system for most driver licensing office transactions. 

ICBC launches online booking system for office driver licensing appointments

No more cotton candy vaping products for youth, B.C. to restrict sales

No more cotton candy vaping products for youth, B.C. to restrict sales
The British Columbia government has followed through on a promise to try to stop young people from vaping with regulations that prevent the sale of products that taste like anything but nicotine.

No more cotton candy vaping products for youth, B.C. to restrict sales

Punch thrown at a Port Coquitlam intersection between a pedestrian and a passenger

Punch thrown at a Port Coquitlam intersection between a pedestrian and a passenger
Earlier this month, a heated exchange between a pedestrian and a passenger in a vehicle ended with a punch being thrown at an intersection in Port Coquitlam. 

Punch thrown at a Port Coquitlam intersection between a pedestrian and a passenger

COVID-19 infections rising in young people

COVID-19 infections rising in young people
More young people are being infected with COVID-19, creating the potential for a severe outbreak, scientists warn.

COVID-19 infections rising in young people

Scientists create polar bear survival timeline

Scientists create polar bear survival timeline
The climate-change clock is ticking on the world's polar bears and a group of Canadian and U.S. scientists say they've determined when that time will run out.

Scientists create polar bear survival timeline

Anxiety high as Canadian schools prepare for students from COVID-ravaged U.S.

Anxiety high as Canadian schools prepare for students from COVID-ravaged U.S.
Post-secondary students from the pandemic-riven United States are getting ready to go back to school in Canada — a rite of passage that's causing more anxiety than usual for parents and front-line university workers alike in the age of COVID-19.

Anxiety high as Canadian schools prepare for students from COVID-ravaged U.S.