The Hamilton Spectator

With election over, it’s back to work

Businesses say it’s time to refocus on helping them amid fourth wave

- AMANDA STEPHENSON

CALGARY — By the time Brittany Anderson sat down Monday evening to watch the federal election results roll in, she had already spent the day dealing with one COVID-19-related challenge after another.

As owner of Laser City — a laser tag venue with two locations in Calgary and one in Edmonton — Anderson spent part of Monday shuffling staff schedules to accommodat­e employees waiting for COVID-19 test results and unable to come to work.

She was also trying to figure out the ins and outs of Alberta’s new proof-of-vaccinatio­n restrictio­n exemption program, which came into effect Monday, and she had to deal with a number of cancelled bookings from customers who were either confused or upset about the province’s latest round of rule changes.

These are the kind of headaches that Anderson said made her relieved to see another Liberal minority government elected, if only because she wants to see politician­s get back to work quickly on what she sees as the No. 1 issue — pandemic recovery.

“I’m pretty happy to see stability, and I hope this means more support for businesses like mine,” Anderson said Tuesday. “We’re all getting very tired and very burned out.”

It’s a sentiment that was echoed Tuesday by business groups across the country, many of whom said with the campaign in the rear-view mirror, it’s time for the federal government to refocus on helping small and medium-sized businesses emerge from the fourth wave of the pandemic currently sweeping most of the country.

“The hope here is that because not much has changed (politicall­y), the transition period will happen quickly and we can get back to work,” said Todd Barclay, president and chief executive of Restaurant­s Canada. “Because every day, every week, every month that goes by is a critical time for us to deal with the significan­t headwinds that we’re dealing with.”

“All of the problems facing businesses that existed before the election, they’ve simply become more urgent,” said Perrin Beatty, president and chief executive of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

Many business groups are calling for targeted support for hard-hit industries like travel, tourism and hospitalit­y.

The Liberal party promised during the campaign to extend the Canada Recovery Hiring Program — which was set to expire in November — until March of 2022. The program is meant to help employers with reopening by offsetting the costs of hiring more staff or increasing wages or hours for existing employees.

But advocates say the government also needs to extend its existing wage subsidy and rent relief programs for entreprene­urs who are still struggling to keep their heads above water.

Beatty agrees. “It would be tragic, having brought people this far, to have them drown 50 feet from shore,” he said. “We have to get them successful­ly to the shore, not with across-theboard subsidies, but with targeted measures to help those who genuinely need it.”

The food service industry is also asking for partial debt relief for government-backed loans, including the Highly Affected Sectors Credit Availabili­ty Program (HASCAP) and any other loan program that the government introduces to help businesses recover from the pandemic. Restaurant­s Canada says eight out of 10 food service operators have taken on debt due to the COVID-19 crisis.

 ?? ANDREJ IVANOV AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers his victory speech on Tuesday. Perrin Beatty, president and chief executive of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, says all of the problems businesses faced before the election have “simply become more urgent.”
ANDREJ IVANOV AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers his victory speech on Tuesday. Perrin Beatty, president and chief executive of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, says all of the problems businesses faced before the election have “simply become more urgent.”

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