Regina Leader-Post

Tories call for probe of student-aid program

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The federal Conservati­ves are calling for an investigat­ion into the Liberal government’s decision to have an internatio­nal charity administer a $900-million program designed to help students during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The request is contained in a letter sent to Auditor General Karen Hogan on Sunday in which the Tories argue that “outsourcin­g” the Canada Student Service Grant to WE Charity undermines Parliament’s ability to monitor the aid program.

The Conservati­ves also noted the “well documented” connection­s between WE and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“By outsourcin­g this program to a third party, the proper channels for Opposition scrutiny, the very bedrock of our parliament­ary democracy, have been circumvent­ed,” reads the letter signed by Conservati­ve MPS Pierre Poilievre, Dan Albas and Raquel Dancho. “Indeed, it is your office that will provide the most legitimate and transparen­t examinatio­n of this program.”

The auditor general’s office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Sunday.

The Liberal government announced the Canada Student Service Grant last week as part of a broader suite of support for students and young people struggling to find internship­s, job placements and other work-related experience during COVID-19.

Eligible students can earn up to $5,000 for volunteer work with non-profit organizati­ons that are helping to cushion the effect of the pandemic. The program is supposed to place up to 20,000 students in volunteer positions by October.

Trudeau defended employing WE to administer the program after conflict-of-interest concerns were raised last week. The prime minister attended several WE events in the past and his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, hosts one of its podcasts.

Trudeau said the decision to use WE was made by the non-partisan public service, not by him. Delivery of the grant program demanded an organizati­on able to reach the tens of thousands of students, he said.

WE directed questions Friday to the government.

The Conservati­ves want Hogan to incorporat­e her study of WE and the student aid program into her larger review of the government’s pandemic-related spending, which is expected to be tabled in Parliament later this year.

Direct federal spending on emergency aid measures now stands at $174 billion, the government announced Friday, driven by a jump in the estimated cost of the Canada Emergency Response Benefit to $80 billion.

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