Ottawa spending another $600M to help businesses survive lockdowns - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:05 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Ottawa spending another $600M to help businesses survive lockdowns

The federal government is giving $600 million to help small- and medium-sized businesses deal with possible lockdowns during a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

New funding will augment $962M fund providing help to small- and medium-sized enterprises

Businesses are facing the prospect of more lockdowns and economic hardship as Infection rates rise in hot spots across the country. (Nam Y. Huh/The Associated Press)

The federal government is giving $600 million to help small- and medium-sized businesses deal with possible lockdowns during a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, Radio-Canada has learned.

The funding aimed at such sectors as tourism, manufacturing and technology will be added to the $962 million already invested in the Regional Relief and Recovery Fund. The announcement, first reported by Radio-Canada, was made earlier todayby Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. CBC News carried the announcement live.

About $456 million of the new money will be made available to help businessesstruggling to bridge their finances through anotherlockdown. It will be distributed through regional development agencies.

Another $144 million will help provide capital and technical support to rural businesses and communities through the offices of Community Futures Canada, which provides small business services to rural communities.

Infection rates are rising in hotspots across the country, raisingthe prospect of renewedgovernment-ordered shutdowns similar to those seen in the spring.

More lockdownscould be fatal for a very large number of businesses, saidJasmin Gunette, vice-president of national affairs at theCanadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB).

"This money willhelp several entrepreneurs to get through the crisis, but we have to make sure that these sums are available quickly," Gunette told CBC News.

The CFIB estimates that14 per centofsmall- and medium-sized businesses in Canada roughly160,000 are at risk of closing their doors for good due to COVID-19. The tourism, hotel and catering sectors are particularly threatened.

Several federal measures need a "new coat of paint," saidGunette.

The CFIB is calling for the commercial rent assistance program, which expired on Wednesday, to be renewed and made more accessible to small businesses.

The CFIBalso wants to know more about the extension of the wage subsidy program for businesses into next summer,which was promised in the Trudeau government's speech from the throne.

The minister of economic development indicated Thursday the government is preparing to provide more help.

"Entrepreneurs in Montreal, all across Quebec, worked really hard to get through the first wave ... what we want to say to them today is,there is hope. We'll help you get through the second wave,"Mlanie Jolysaid in Ottawa.

"We know we have to do more and we will do more."