Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Environment Groups, Churches, Unions Ask Oil Bailout For Families, Not Companies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2020 06:52 PM

    Some Canadian organizations are asking the federal government to focus any bailout of the oil industry on workers and families, not corporations.

     

    The request comes in an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, released Tuesday morning and signed by environmental organizations, faith and labour groups that the signatories say represent about 1.3 million people.

     

    "Giving billions of dollars to failing oil and gas companies will not help workers and only prolongs our reliance on fossil fuels," the letter says.

     

    It comes in response to a media report that Ottawa is developing a multibillion-dollar bailout package for an industry buffeted by record low prices for its product.

     

    Published reports have said industry executives want a program that would purchase distressed assets, suspend federal carbon and income taxes, and provide no-interest loans and loan guarantees.

     

    But Rev. Cheri Di Novo of Toronto's Trinity St. Paul's United Church said that's poor policy.

     

    "If you pour money into the wealthiest people in the country and the biggest corporations, it doesn't trickle down to the workers," said Di Novo, a former Ontario New Democrat politician.

     

    "It tends to stay at the top."

     

    Any oilpatch bailout is likely to be one of the biggest federal spending programs in recent memory, said Julia Levin of Environmental Defence.

     

    She said such spending should be aligned with other federal priorities, such as helping workers transition from the fossil fuels industry and fighting climate change.

     

    "They can use this opportunity to actually put in place the kinds of investments that are aligned with the commitments they've made."

     

    The letter calls for immediate income support for oil and gas workers, including increased access to unemployment insurance. It also suggests money for retraining workers for what it calls "emerging low-carbon sectors like energy efficiency, technology, health care and renewable energy."

     

    As well, it asks for money to hire workers to clean oil and gas wells left abandoned by energy companies no longer able to pay for them.

     

    That money, it says, "should also be tied to regulatory change in Alberta to ensure the province puts in place a polluter-pays program so the public is not left with these liabilities in the future."

     

    Robin Edger of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment rejected the argument that bailing out companies would bail out their employees.

     

    "Why don't we just cut out the middleman? If our concern is the workers, we should just support the workers directly," Edger said.

     

    "We have oil and gas wells that need to be cleaned up. We have industries with real futures that we need workers to be trained into."

     

    Di Novo pointed out that massive bailouts of the auto industry didn't help in the long term.

     

    "Clearly, giving all that money to (General Motors) — and I was in government when they did it — did not save those workers' jobs," she said. "As soon as the company could make more profit by moving their operation somewhere else, they did."

     

    In 2009, the federal government spent $13.7 billion to bail out auto manufacturers. Much of that loan was never repaid and nearly 2,700 jobs will be lost in Oshawa, Ont., alone.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

    On February 7th, at approximately 9:35 p.m., Langley RCMP was called to the a parking lot in the 6300 block of 200th Street for a report of a shooting.

    Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

    Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

    Police immediately began a search and later confirmed she was last seen on February 7, 2020, leaving from work in the 1200-block of West Broadway Avenue in Vancouver.    

    Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond
    The male was identified as Coleton SZALAY. SZALAY had a Canada-wide warrant stemming from a robbery out of Vancouver as well as a warrant for theft under $5,000 out of Richmond.  

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

    Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

    Hundreds of protesters blocked the entrances to the British Columbia legislature on Tuesday as demonstrations in support of Indigenous hereditary chiefs who oppose a pipeline project continued to flare across the country.

    Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

    Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well

    Dr. Bonnie Henry says the individuals in the Vancouver region are being monitored by health professionals and three of them are living in a home with others.

    Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well

    Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces

    Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces
    In the past 15 months, the Province has supported the fastest creation of licensed child care spaces in B.C.’s history.

    Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces