Toronto Star

Ottawa to ease rules on wage subsidy benefit

Legislatio­n would cover businesses with revenue drop of 15% or more

- ALEX BALLINGALL OTTAWA BUREAU With files from Heather Scoffield

OTTAWA— The Liberal government’s latest COVID-19 emergency legislatio­n could make it easier for more people to benefit from a wage subsidy that’s designed to keep workers on the payroll of companies hurt by the pandemic downturn.

According to a draft of the bill obtained by the Star, Ottawa is now willing to cover the majority of wages for businesses that lost 15 per cent of their revenue in March, instead of the steeper 30 per cent the government had proposed earlier.

But businesses still need to attest to the sharper 30 per cent drop in revenue to get the subsidy in April and May, compared with the same months one year earlier, the draft bill says.

The draft also includes new flexibilit­y by allowing certain businesses to use January and February as the reference point for their falling revenue.

Groups like the Council of Canadian Innovators have argued the one-year reference is “not appropriat­e” for companies like tech start-ups and some smaller businesses that have fluctuatin­g revenue that sometimes isn’t tracked on a monthly basis.

Despite the changes, the council expressed disappoint­ment that the proposed legislatio­n doesn’t include broader criteria so more businesses can get the support.

“We preferred that Canada omit the revenue test like the U.K. and U.S. have done, which would support more domestic high-growth companies,” the council’s executive director, Ben Bergen, said in an emailed statement Monday.

“We still need more targeted measures … to help Canada’s tech sector weather the current storm and capitalize on the rebound thereafter,” he said.

The draft bill would allow Ottawa to cover up to 75 per cent of the wage costs for eligible businesses and charities, based on the average weekly wages paid from Jan. 1 to March 15 of this year.

The government has estimated the measure as originally proposed would cost $71billion.

After receiving the draft legislatio­n Monday night, opposition parties said their members were poring over it as representa­tives negotiated with the Liberal minority government about recalling Parliament to pass the bill in its second emergency session in just two weeks.

Speaking outside Rideau Cottage for his daily exchange with reporters, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he hoped the legislatio­n would “quickly pass” through Parliament so businesses that have lost revenue because of the COVID-19 pandemic will get money to keep workers on the payroll.

“A lot of work has been done since we announced our plan to subsidize wages. We continue to rely on your input and … feedback as we refine it, and we’ll have more details to share very soon,” Trudeau said.

Simon Ross, press secretary to Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez, said the Liberals are open to working with parties to make sure there is the unanimous consent required to rush the legislatio­n through as soon as possible.

“The government is ready to collaborat­e,” Ross said. “Canadians need help right now; they need us to set politics aside.”

Peter Julian, an NDP MP from British Columbia and the party’s House Leader, said the New Democrats are carefully looking at the proposed bill after the Liberal government’s first emergency legislatio­n — passed unanimousl­y in the House of Commons on March 25 — contained a number of unacceptab­le “poison pills.”

Those included measures that would have given the Liberal minority special powers to tax and spend without parliament­ary approval until the end of 2021. After opposition parties balked, the government agreed to limit its special powers to spending and borrowing, with a sunset clause that takes effect the end of September 2020.

That bill also created the Canada Emergency Response Benefit that will pay $2,000 per month to people who lost work because of the pandemic.

This time around, Julian said the NDP is looking to make sure the wage subsidy legislatio­n does what Trudeau and his ministers promised it would: support businesses hit hard by the pandemic. The NDP has called for the government to drop the revenue-loss requiremen­t for businesses with fewer than 50 employees, and for the government to do everything it can to speed up applicatio­ns to get the money out quickly. NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh wrote to Trudeau on Tuesday, urging him to change the Canada Emergency Response Benefit during the upcoming session of Parliament so people working fewer hours can receive it. Singh also wants the government to make sure essential workers get at least $15 an hour, along with a 20 per cent bump in “danger pay” for working through the pandemic. Trudeau committed Monday to expand the benefit for people with reduced hours or who are still working but earn less money than the benefit will pay.

“This crisis has too profound an economic impact on people, so we can’t leave gaping holes in benefits that really should be providing as much as possible to Canadians right across the country,” Julian said Tuesday. Conservati­ve MP Candice Bergen, the party’s House Leader, told the Star that the goal is to get money directly to Canadian businesses as soon as possible. Her party also wants the government to agree to weekly sessions in the House of Commons with reduced numbers of MPs, so the Opposition can question Trudeau and his cabinet about their response to the pandemic.

Like Julian, Bergen said it’s too soon to say when the House will be recalled to deal with the wage subsidy bill. She said it will be up to the government to show it is open to working with other parties to earn their support for the bill.

“We are not going in there saying: ‘our way or the highway,’ ” she said. “We’re there for more than just rubber-stamping their legislatio­n.

“We want to be able to see small businesses supported directly and the money get to people immediatel­y.”

“We can’t leave gaping holes in benefits that really should be providing as much as possible to Canadians.”

PETER JULIAN NDP HOUSE LEADER

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he hoped the bill would “quickly pass” so businesses will be able to keep workers on the payroll.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he hoped the bill would “quickly pass” so businesses will be able to keep workers on the payroll.

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