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British Columbia

Premiers across Canada call for extension of CEBA loan repayment deadline

Leaders of all 13 provinces and territories want to see the deadline pushed back for the repayment of the small-business pandemic loans.

Deadline for partial forgiveness, interest-free repayment on pandemic loans set to end January 2024

British Columbia Premier David Eby speaks during a meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, not shown, in Trudeau's office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Monday, Sept. 25, 2023.
British Columbia Premier David Eby initiated a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in which all 13 provincial and territorial premiers asked Ottawa to extend the repayment deadline for small-business loans. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Premiers of every Canadian province and territory are calling on the federal government to extend the repayment deadline for small-business loans given out during the pandemic by a year.

The request was made in aletter, initiated by B.C. Premier David Eby, to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. It echoes previous calls from small businesses and chambers of commerce, asking for a furtherone-year extension for the repayment ofCanadian Emergency Business Account (CEBA) loans, and more time for loan forgiveness. The current deadline isJan.18, 2024.

The deadline has already been extended twice, but Eby said that small businesses are being squeezed by economic pressures.

"Just when many small businesses are starting to find their feet after the pandemic, they're now being walloped by rising inflation and interest rates," Eby said.

The loans of up to $60,000 were given out to small businesses and non-profit organizations across Canada between April 2020 and June 2021. If paid back by the deadline, up to 33 per centof the loan is forgivable. After Jan. 18, the loans will automatically convert to three-year terms and accrue interest at a rate of five per cent a year.

Through the program, approximately $49 billion went out to about900,000 businesses across Canada. In B.C., 122,890 businesses were approved for CEBA loans worth more than $6.6 billion.

A smiling white woman with curled blonde hair wearing a green silk and floral shirt over a white t-shirt stands in front of a store, flanked by plants.
Megan Johns, founder and owner of Victoria B.C. retail store the Green Kiss, said even though her business is growing, the rising cost of goods and labour would make a timely repayment of the CEBA loan difficult. (Submitted by Megan Johns)

Extension would be 'huge stress relief': owner

Megan Johns, founder and owner of natural beauty store The Green Kiss, said that earlier this year, she was on track to repay her CEBA loan by the Januarydeadline. Over the past six months, however, the rising costs of goods, services, and labour has changed that despite the fact her business has continued to grow every year.

"Margins are getting smaller and smaller and smaller due to the rising costs across the board. Every aspect of the business has become more challenging and it is more challenging now than it was in 2020 so far."

Johns said an extension of one or two years would be a "huge stress relief," and also advocated for the idea of a repayment plan.

The BC Chamber of Commerce has also been actively calling for a one-year extension. President and CEO Fiona Famulak said many of the small businesses she speaks with are struggling with reduced revenues and high levels of debt, and an extension could be make or break.

"The loss of the forgivable portion that could be the difference between an organization succeeding and an organization going bankrupt," Famulak said.

The chamber has been critical of the previously announced three-week extension, which extended the deadline from Dec. 31, 2023 to Jan.18, 2024.

"Small- and medium-businesses are the backbone of our provincial economy. They're the backbone of our national economy. So we need to support them in every which way," Famulak said.

Work to be done at provincial level

While the Canadian Federation of Independent Business is also supportive of a one-year extension, B.C. Provincial Affairs Director Annie Dormuth said there is also a role the province could play in easing the burden on small businesses.

"There are also tools right here at home that they can use to help small businesses survive."

Dormuth said she wants the province to provide morehelp to small businesses by paying for provincially mandated sick days, usingWorkSafe BC's surplus revenue to create rebates, and increasingB.C.'s employer health tax exemption threshold.