We’re
heading for an even more difficult road than need be the case.
Federal
government cutting back on disaster assistance as floods become more
severe
10
May, 2017
Even
as the cost of flood damage has risen in recent years, the provinces
have been forced to shoulder more of the burden because the federal
government has made it harder for them to qualify for compensation
from its disaster relief fund.
“The
(federal) government doesn’t want to be in the business of disaster
assistance anymore,” says Jason Thistlethwaite, assistant professor
at the University of Waterloo. “It’s too expensive.”
After
a natural disaster like the current severe flooding affecting parts
of Quebec and Ontario, provinces can apply to the federal government
to reimburse some of their costs through the Disaster Financial
Assistance Arrangements (DFAA) program. In 2015, the Conservative
government tripled the amount a provincial government had to spend on
disaster relief to qualify for federal compensation. A province’s
total relief bill must now be greater than $3.07 per capita before it
can apply to Ottawa for funding. In Quebec, for instance, that
threshold is about $25 million.
The
change was made because Ottawa was doling out far more DFAA money
than planned, Thistlethwaite said.
During
a premiers’ meeting last summer, the provinces called on the
federal government to restore funding for floods and other natural
disasters. The changes, they argued, “substantially reduced the
federal government’s share of disaster-related costs, offloading
these onto individuals, provinces and territories.”
On
Wednesday, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s office said her
government “remains committed” to that request.
Public
Safety Minister Ralph Goodale’s office told the National Post the
decision to raise the thresholds was made by the previous government.
In
a statement this week, Conservative MP Steven Blaney, public safety
minister when the change was made, said he was proud to have
modernized the program to “ensure that emergency relief funding
continues to be available to Canadians in a more sustainable way.”
Every
threshold in the cost-sharing formula was raised at that time.
Previously, the federal government would reimburse 90 per cent of
costs above $5 per capita — about $41 million in Quebec. Now, that
threshold is $15.17 per capita — roughly $124 million in Quebec.
The
federal government has indeed been paying out far more than it
planned for flood relief in recent years.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.