A federal target to halt landfilling of plastic garbage could cost up to $8.3 billion, says the Department of Environment. It would require construction of dozens of new recycling plants nationwide: 'Business as usual will not be sufficient.'
Won’t Halt Costly $3B Refit
Work on the costliest renovation in Canadian history will continue regardless of the pandemic, says the Department of Public Works. MPs have noted they still have no final deadline or budget for the multi-billion dollar refit of Parliament’s Centre Block and iconic Peace Tower: "We don't know."
Reject Gulf War Vets Claim
The Department of Veterans Affairs says decades of medical records prove Gulf War veterans have a lower suicide rate than the general public. Researchers said there was no evidence to support repeated claims of long-term health effects: 'They had a significantly lower risk.'
‘News Leader’ Seeks Bailout
The Canadian Press, self-described “trusted news leader”, is lobbying for grants from the same federal government it covers. A staff memo disclosed by the Ryerson University Journalism Project said management was “pressing” cabinet for aid though it already received seven figures in federal fees and grants last year: "We are pressing Ottawa."
See More Insolvency In May
Legislators predict another wave of insolvencies May 1 due to ongoing delays in processing of federal payroll rebates. Cabinet gave various estimates of when the first of $73 billion in subsidies will be paid: "They have a choice to make: lights on, lights off."
“It Is Not Their Money”
Cabinet can’t rebate GST payments to small business because “it’s not their money”, says Finance Minister Bill Morneau. Opposition MPs last week proposed the rebate as a quick $30 billion remittance to employers facing bankruptcy: "We looked at it."
Demand Charge Card Relief
Banks should follow one credit union’s lead in waiving all credit card interest payments for six months, the Commons finance committee was told. Vancouver City Savings Credit Union also waived ATM fees until September 30 and deferred mortgage payments for borrowers hit by pandemic job losses: "Canadians want to see the big banks are not profiting during this crisis."
$7.6B In Claims In One Week
The Canada Revenue Agency last week received $7.6 billion in claims for relief cheques by self-employed and other uninsured workers suffering income loss due to the pandemic. “We know how very honest Canadians are,” said Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough.
MPs Hear Tragic Testimony
The recession is so stark and sudden a business counselling hotline is taking suicide calls from shopkeepers, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business yesterday told the Commons finance committee. Parliament meets Saturday to pass a $73 billion payroll rebate bill that comes too late for thousands facing ruin, MPs were told: "I can’t underscore enough just how dark and dangerous these days are."
Deficit Hits The Stratosphere
The federal deficit has catapulted to $184 billion, more than triple the previous record. The budget shortfall is equal to 112 percent of all personal taxes paid to the national treasury last year: "The long-term effects of this are going to be very serious."
‘Big Failure’ On Preparedness
Shipping sixteen tonnes of pandemic supplies to China in February was not the “best decision”, the Canadian Public Health Association said yesterday. Witnesses told the Commons health committee that federal regulators’ failure to stock up on masks, gloves and medical apparel was reckless: "The national emergency stockpile is probably the largest failure."
Feds Predict Turmoil To 2021
Economic turmoil will continue into 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said yesterday. Job losses for March alone totaled 1,010,700 with millions more working reduced hours: "It could be in a year, a year and a half."
Confirm 11,000 Deaths Likely
About 11,000 Canadians may die of Covid-19, twice the average fatality rate from influenza despite “stronger epidemic controls” including travel bans and workplace shutdowns, the Public Health Agency said yesterday. The forecast confirmed figures detailed in a pandemic master plan reported March 18.
Building Permits Crash 23%
The value of new building permits collapsed 23 percent last month, a decline close to the crash of 1930. “We need to prevent that recession from becoming a depression,” Treasury Board President Jean-Yves Duclos yesterday told reporters.
Dire Shortage, Gov’t Admits
A federal medical officer yesterday acknowledged a “dire” shortage of pandemic supplies. The admission came eight weeks after the Department of Foreign Affairs shipped sixteen tonnes of supplies to China: "They may only have a couple of days left in some of their acute care hospitals."



