Lethbridge Herald

Staggering job losses as COVID deaths climb

Feds plan extension of wagesubsid­y program

- Colin Perkel THE CANADIAN PRESS – TORONTO

The economic brutality of Canada’s anti-pandemic measures was highlighte­d on Friday with the latest figures showing almost two million people lost their jobs in April on top of the one million in March as COVID19 cases and deaths climbed across the country.

The unemployme­nt rate rocketed to the second-highest level on record — 13 per cent, up from 7.8 per cent in March — as the full force of the pandemic hit, Statistics Canada data show. The result was somewhat better than economists had predicted.

“Today’s job numbers weigh heavy on my heart,” said

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, whose province lost 689,000 jobs. “Real people who are struggling through no fault of their own.”

The job-loss report came as cases of coronaviru­s disease and related deaths rose yet again.

Quebec health officials reported 94 new deaths linked, bringing the provincial tally to 2,725. Ontario said it had 477 new cases and 63 more deaths, pushing the province’s total fatalities above 1,500. Nova Scotia reported two more deaths at a long-term care facility in Halifax for an overall provincial total of 46.

In one positive developmen­t, Prince Edward Island announced it no longer had any active cases of COVID-19, with all 27 of the province’s cases now considered recovered.

Stay-home directives and business closures implemente­d in mid-March to curb the spread of the highly contagious and potentiall­y lethal SARS-CoV-2 virus have idled much of the country’s work force. The government has been spending billions of dollars in an effort to help people and businesses affected by the outbreak, but some critics have complained it hasn’t been enough.

In Ottawa, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced an extension to the federal government’s emergency wagesubsid­y program beyond its early-June endpoint, with details to come next week. The program covers 75 per cent of worker pay up to $847 a week to try to help employers keep employees on the job.

He also promised the government would be offering further support for specific sectors.

Trudeau said the reopening of the economy and lifting of restrictio­ns would occur “very, very gradually” and transmissi­on of the disease would have to be carefully monitored.

Ford was adamant that the Canada-U.S. border stay closed for now, and urged people from out of province to stay away as well.

The prime minister called it a “fundamenta­l principle” that no one should have to go to work if doing so would jeopardize their personal safety. He said all workplaces should be safe and government­s were putting measures in place to mitigate any risks.

In Ontario, a union representi­ng 35,000 workers in hard-hit long-term care homes said the province wants to change a directive that gives all workers access to N95 masks. The provincial government said it wants everyone who needs the masks to have them but conceded they are in limited supply.

More than 1,700 workers in the province’s long-term care homes have tested positive and at least one has died.

To address some safety concerns, the transit authority in Montreal said it would start handing out 600,000 reusable masks to users, and would give employees two washable face coverings each. While not mandatory, the authority is urging passengers to wear a mask when riding the bus or subway.

In all, Canada has seen more than 66,000 cases of COVID, with more than 4,500 deaths.

— With files from Canadian Press reporters across the country.

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