Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Financial Aid Requests Won't Be Hindered By Service Canada Closures: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Mar, 2020 07:14 PM

    OTTAWA - Service Canada employees can and should be working from home, despite the growing demand generated by financial-aid applications, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday.

     

    The federal government has announced the closure of 317 physical Service Canada centres to limit the spread of COVID-19.

     

    "As part of the initiative of encouraging people to stay home and work from home, this is something that we realize we can and should be doing," Trudeau said during his daily briefing on the health crisis.

     

    The government has made "significant efforts" over the last several years to make sure that all services available at Service Canada centres are also available online, he said.

     

    "We want to make sure that Service Canada employees are continuing to work extremely hard to serve Canadians, to respond to their needs, and that's why things are going to be done online and through the phone."

     

    The Liberals say the move, announced late Thursday night, should not affect most unemployed workers who seek employment-insurance benefits since the vast majority of applications are done online.

     

    Trudeau added that special considerations will be given to "particularly vulnerable" people who have difficulty accessing those services.

     

    The network of Service Canada centres, along with almost 250 more outreach centres, received about 8.4 million visits during the 12-month period between April 2018 and March 2019. The figure, noted in a recently posted evaluation of federal services, included over 1.9 million people walking in to use a self-service kiosk.

     

    The demand on Service Canada has increased in recent days, with more than one million new applications for EI benefits arriving in just over a week as businesses close due to public-health concerns.

     

    The union representing Service Canada employees supported the move.

     

    "This measure will protect the public and its members from contracting COVID-19, and will not negatively impact the ability of vulnerable Canadians to receive the support they need at this critical time," Chris Aylward, Public Service Alliance of Canada national president, said in a statement.

     

    People who cannot be accommodated online or over the phone will be given a specific appointment time and their file will be prepared in advance, the union said.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    3 More Coronavirus Cases In B.C., 33 People Now Infected In Canada

    VICTORIA - Three more cases of the novel coronavirus have been confirmed in British Columbia, bringing the total number of people infected to 12 in the province.    

    3 More Coronavirus Cases In B.C., 33 People Now Infected In Canada

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria
    VICTORIA - Workers have served strike notice at the Fairmont Empress, a well-known landmark hotel in Victoria.

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria
    VICTORIA - Workers have served strike notice at the Fairmont Empress, a well-known landmark hotel in Victoria.

    Strike Possible By Saturday At Fairmont Empress Hotel In Victoria

    From Pepper Spray To Profiling: A Look At How Protests Have Been Policed In Canada

    "You have one opportunity to move up that road and clear it off or you will be arrested," he told protesters at the 1997 Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in Vancouver.    

    From Pepper Spray To Profiling: A Look At How Protests Have Been Policed In Canada

    Taliban-U.S. Deal A Step To Fragile Peace, Says Ex-Afghan Envoy To Canada

    Taliban-U.S. Deal A Step To Fragile Peace, Says Ex-Afghan Envoy To Canada
    OTTAWA - Omar Samad calls the agreement reached this past weekend between the United States and the Taliban a "peace opportunity," not an actual deal.    

    Taliban-U.S. Deal A Step To Fragile Peace, Says Ex-Afghan Envoy To Canada

    MacKay In The Lead But Nearly Half Of Tories Undecided On Leadership: Poll

    MacKay In The Lead But Nearly Half Of Tories Undecided On Leadership: Poll
    OTTAWA - A high number of undecided voters in the ongoing Conservative leadership race suggests there's room for others to catch up to, and potentially beat, front-runner Peter MacKay, says the vice-president of the Leger polling firm.

    MacKay In The Lead But Nearly Half Of Tories Undecided On Leadership: Poll