Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Small businesses seek hiring aid in federal budget

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2022 12:24 PM
  • Small businesses seek hiring aid in federal budget

OTTAWA - The voice of Canadian small business says it hopes the federal government breathes extra months of life into an incentive for companies to hire new staff, a way to help firms only now hitting recovery mode.

Dan Kelly, president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, says his organization has asked Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to extend the hiring credit.

The hiring incentive and two other programs aimed at hard-hit businesses are scheduled to expire in early May.

The government introduced the credit in last year's budget, providing a subsidy to struggling businesses that expanded their payrolls by hiring staff or giving their workers more hours during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kelly says take-up of the program has been low because public health restrictions have only recently eased, allowing businesses to get closer to usual operations.

It's why he is hoping the Liberals add six more months to the program to give it life until the fall.

MORE National ARTICLES

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens
Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam says kids and adolescents are still at low risk of serious illness in general from COVID-19 but because of the high rate of infection due to Omicron more kids are being admitted to hospital.

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing
They say in a release that the female victim was located Thursday around 4:30 p.m. in an underground parkade in the 1100-block of Austin Avenue. Police say she was rushed to hospital for treatment of stab wounds but was pronounced dead a short time later.

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results
Teck said steelmaking coal sales for the fourth quarter came in at 5.1 million tonnes, below the 5.2 million to 5.7 million tonnes in its revised guidance it issued Dec. 5 after the record rainfall in B.C. that knocked out rail and road infrastructure.

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group
I have been an economist, working on Bay Street in Toronto, since the early 1980s. I now lead a team that provides analysis and forecasts on numerous economic and financial indicators, such as interest rates, economic growth, unemployment, housing, exchange rates, and, of course, inflation. 

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top
Some postal service employees doing tasks with a greater risk of catching COVID-19 — for example working in a pair to unload a van inside — are being given N95 masks, but a "fit test by a qualified professional" is required before they can be worn.

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top

Surprise new documents identified in James case

Surprise new documents identified in James case
Crown prosecutor David Butcher told Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes that he learned of two new sets of documents relevant to the case during an interview Wednesday night with Hilary Woodward, executive financial officer at the legislature.    

Surprise new documents identified in James case