Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds move toward stand-alone dental insurance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2022 11:48 AM
  • Feds move toward stand-alone dental insurance

OTTAWA - The Liberal government is moving toward providing dental-care insurance directly to qualifying Canadians, rather than working with provinces and territories to bolster existing coverage.

That will involve hiring an external company to process claims for the new stand-alone insurance program, Health Canada officials told The Canadian Press. On Friday, the Procurement Department invited companies with experience in those claims to apply for pre-qualification.

Health Canada officials, who gave a briefing on the condition they not be named publicly, said that would help the government refine the program before hiring a company to do the work.

They are still working on the details, but the officials said the dental-care coverage in the new program will closely reflect the benefits programs for First Nations, Inuit, refugees and veterans, who fall within federal jurisdiction for health care.

The Liberals committed to some form of federal dental-care coverage for low-income Canadians in its March confidence and supply agreement with the New Democrats.

The deal would see the opposition party support the minority government on key votes through to 2025, in exchange for some NDP priorities.

Initially, the NDP expected there would be a full-fledged insurance program in place by the end of 2022 for children under the age of 12 with a household income below $90,000.

This fall, the tight timeline prompted the Liberals and NDP to compromise and create aninterim benefit program, which would allow the government to issue cheques to families who qualify while work continues on the federal insurance program.

Bill C-31, which would give children with families who make less than $90,000 a year as much as $650 per child to care for their teeth, passed third reading in the House of Commons on Thursday night. Officials said they hope to be able to launch the benefit on Dec. 1, but the timing depends on how long it takes to get through the Senate and receive royal assent.

"This is a first step, an interim benefit," Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said of Bill C-31 during his appearance at the House of Commons health committee on Monday.

"There will be a second program … that will be better suited to the dental-health care that other Canadians, including the younger children will need overtime: that includes seniors, people with disabilities, people with relatively low or middle income ranges."

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has said he wants to see that program in place by the end of 2023, which is when the confidence and supply agreement said everyone under the age of 18, seniors and people living with disabilities would qualify for coverage.

The deal said full implementation would come by 2025.

The Health Canada officials said the timing of the new program will depend on how the procurement process unfolds.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada to be 'prominent' at events mourning Queen

Canada to be 'prominent' at events mourning Queen
The late queen's coffin left Balmoral Castle in Scotland on Sunday, where it was driven by hearse to the Scottish capital of Edinburgh. It will be flown to London on Tuesday, where it will eventually lie in state for the public to say their goodbyes in the four days leading up to Monday's funeral.

Canada to be 'prominent' at events mourning Queen

Female pedestrian injured in Surrey hit-and-run

Female pedestrian injured in Surrey hit-and-run
Police were called to King George Blvd near 72 Ave at about 9 p.m. Sunday. Officers say a silver sedan heading south on King George struck a woman who was crossing the street between intersections.

Female pedestrian injured in Surrey hit-and-run

Wildfire smoke continues to blanket parts of B.C.

Wildfire smoke continues to blanket parts of B.C.
The federal government's air quality index shows areas with the highest levels of potentially dangerous wood smoke include Cranbrook and Castelgar in southeastern B.C., the eastern Fraser Valley and the communities of Whistler and Squamish.

Wildfire smoke continues to blanket parts of B.C.

Surrey RCMP need the public's assistance in locating missing man Kamleshbhai Manek

Surrey RCMP need the public's assistance in locating missing man Kamleshbhai Manek
Kamleshbhai Manek was last seen on August 28, 2022 at 9:30 a.m., near the 13300 block of Old Yale Road in Surrey. Police are concerned for Kamleshbhai’s wellbeing as he has not made contact with his usual family/friends/ associates. Kamleshbhai is described as a 65-year-old South Asian male, 5’8”, 254 lbs with black hair and brown eyes.

Surrey RCMP need the public's assistance in locating missing man Kamleshbhai Manek

Beware of scam targeting seniors that dupes them of thousands of dollars: North Van RCMP

Beware of scam targeting seniors that dupes them of thousands of dollars: North Van RCMP
The suspect claimed that the woman’s grand daughter was arrested by police and needed $9000 to be released on bail. The fraudster then came to the victims’ home and picked up the money. In this incident, the suspect is described as a Caucasian woman between the ages of 20-30, 5’10 tall, long brown hair, slim build, wearing gold hoop earrings, a white top, tattoos on her left forearm, and having an accent.

Beware of scam targeting seniors that dupes them of thousands of dollars: North Van RCMP

King's accession ceremony Saturday at Rideau Hall

King's accession ceremony Saturday at Rideau Hall
The Heritage Department says the national ceremony will start with a memorial parade composed of Canadian Armed Forces members and RCMP officers along with a 96-gun salute — one for each year of her life — and a CF-18 flypast.

King's accession ceremony Saturday at Rideau Hall