Bill C-25, which Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland introduced in the House of Commons March 26, includes $4 billion to help provinces and territories address immediate health-care system pressures, including backlogs in access to care.
Freeland said COVID-19 has placed extreme pressure on health-care systems across the country.
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland
The proposed legislation also includes $2.2 billion through the federal gas tax fund to address short-term infrastructure priorities and a $1 billion one-time payment to the provinces and territories to help with vaccine rollout.
“We know that the vaccine rollout is ramping up, and that must continue without delay,” said Freeland. “And we know that our cities and towns, which are responsible for local infrastructure that Canadians use, need urgent support. That is support the federal government will provide.”
The legislation also proposes changing the name of the federal gas tax fund to the Canada Community-Building Fund. The gas tax fund is a permanent source of twice-yearly funding for provinces and territories, who in turn provide these funds to municipalities while also supporting on-reserve infrastructure projects in First Nations communities.
More information about Ottawa’s COVID-19 response plan can be found here.
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