Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds give $2B to help schools reopen safely

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2020 04:58 PM
  • Feds give $2B to help schools reopen safely

The federal government is providing up to $2 billion in additional funding to help provinces and territories ensure that kids can safely return to class this fall.

The money is on top of $19 billion Ottawa has already promised to help them cope with the ongoing impact the COVID-19 pandemic is having on their economies and health-care systems.

Education is not a federal responsibility and provinces are responsible for their own school reopening plans, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday, but he said he also wanted to calm the fears of parents by ensuring the provinces have additional resources to make schools safe.

"Over the past week or so I've heard from so many Liberal MPs, so many parents across the country who are still extremely worried about how that reopening is going to go," Trudeau said at a news conference held in a Toronto school.

"We've seen the provinces put forward plans for that reopening and they are confident that they are doing what is necessary, but parents were still concerned. So we said, 'Let's give the provinces even more resources to be able to do everything that is necessary to keep our kids safe.'"

The money will flow through the new Safe Return to Class Fund — specifically for school reopenings.

Ottawa is also providing an additional $112 million to help schools in First Nations communities with safe reopening plans.

Provinces and territories will have flexibility to spend the money as they see fit to bolster their efforts to ensure schools can reopen this fall as safely as possible, Trudeau said.

"We had no intention of interfering in provincial areas of jurisdiction, that's why this money coming in to be able to top up the plans that the premiers have set forward is going to be something that will give people confidence, not just in the safety of their kids, but in their ability to get back to work and our economy to get going once again," he said.

Schools have been shut down across the country since COVID-19 started sweeping across Canada in mid-March.

Earlier Wednesday, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he believes any federal money given to the provinces for schools should come with explicit plans to address school safety, including mandating smaller class sizes.

"We need to make sure that announcement is tied to schools directly," Singh told reporters in Toronto.

"We need to make sure that money is actually going toward making schools safer and that there's a plan in place."

Singh also says Ottawa must address a pressing need for child-care spaces with funding of up to $10 billion over four years.

MORE National ARTICLES

First B.C. school to start this year lays out plan

First B.C. school to start this year lays out plan
There were two questions that nagged at Kyla Blair when the school where she works — and that her children attend — restarted class. Would her kids be safe? And would she be able to help keep other kids safe?

First B.C. school to start this year lays out plan

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend
The Surrey COVID-19 Compliance and Enforcement Team (CCET) issued $2,300 fines to one restaurant, two event/banquet spaces, and one after hours club on August 23.

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi
A Coquitlam man is missing in an area that connects with a spider web of walking and hiking trails, and Coquitlam RCMP is asking for your help to find him.

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative
People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier launched a full-throated attack on Erin O'Toole Monday, accusing the newly minted Conservative leader of wearing a "true blue" mask during the leadership campaign and warning that he is really "Liberal-lite."

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute
Canadian lumber producers cheered the latest decision Monday from the World Trade Organization on Canada's long-standing dispute with its largest trading partner over exports of softwood lumber — a finding the United States quickly denounced as unfair, biased and flawed.

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness
Canadian First Nations and environmentalists have joined a U.S. lawsuit aimed at overturning a decision that opens an Alaska wilderness to oil and gas exploration.

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness