100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Senate passes COVID-19 financial aid package for Canadians

The Senate has passed the $82-billion aid package that passed through the House of Commons shortly before 6:00 a.m. this morning meaning Canadians will soon have access to financial aid. 

It was highly debated as members of the Opposition would not pass the Bill that contained taxing and spending powers for the federal government without requiring Parliament approval.  The Liberals did agree to scale them back enough to get unanimous consent.

In his daily address, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the Canadian Emergency Relief Benefit (CERB) will replace what was announced last week in order to streamline the process of getting money to Canadians. 

The CERB will put $2,000 a month for the next four months into the pockets of people who are unemployed, sick or quarantined, caring for someone who is ill or taking care of children. An online portal will be launched and after applying for relief, it will be 10 days when people will see the money. Almost a million people applied for Employment Insurance across Canada last week.

Trudeau was pressed by one reporter about why going into quarantine is not mandatory and only required for returning travellers.  Repeating that it is required, he moved onto the next question. 

Trudeau explained why returning Canadians are not having their temperatures taken through thermometers or thermal screening after reports of travellers masking symptoms of COVID-19 in order to get back into the country.  He said it was a lesson learned during the SARS epidemic that those testing methods can sometimes fail and give a false reading and give a false sense of security to the person tested.

The Prime Minister also thanked the media and reporters for continuing to provide a vital flow of information to Canadians.  He said there will be federal financial aid for media outlets that are seeing advertisement revenue vanish rapidly. 

Mo Fahim
Mo Fahim
The Moose News Reporter, If you see any news in the making contact The Moose News Team at 100news.moosefm.com or call 867-920-2523

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

YK, Ndilo, Dettah experiencing extended power outage

Yellowknife, Ndilǫ and Dettah are currently experiencing an extended power outage that began at approximately 5:30 pm ET this evening. The communities are amid temperatures dipping into the minus 30 zone with the windchill

Come meet a mammoth face to face at debut of Ice Age to Information Age

“We have these giant cardboard animals, that are five different megafauna from the Pleistocene,” says Mildred Hall Teacher Ashley Deavu. “The kids know all about them and their adaptations…”The multimedia works of students from grades 1 to 2 and grades 7 to 8, engages with histories and stories from the territory going back to time immemorial on Turtle Island’s north and then branches out across the globe.

Spending on medical travel in the territory increases

NWT Medical Travel Services have released their report on the statistics of and spending on medical travel in the territory.  

Inuit president calling for “allyship” as Arctic security talks continue to circle

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami President Natan Obed has called for Indigenous leaders to be included in ongoing decision-making and discussions on sovereignty and economic development in the Arctic. The call came after Indigenous leadership was reportedly left out of decision-making meetings in Ottawa last week between the premiers and the prime minister.

“Is it safe to eat vegetables from gardens in Yellowknife?”

A group of scientists working out of the territory say that while it is safe there are some “low” risks associated with growing local produce. Their project focusses on examining garden soils and vegetables, testing for arsenic and other metals associated with regional mining activity.