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Air Canada and ITA Airways sign deal increasing options for travel to Italy

Air Canada and ITA Airways sign deal increasing options for travel to Italy

National Post3 days ago
MONTREAL — Air Canada and Italian airline ITA Airways have signed a new codeshare agreement, increasing travel options between Canada and Italy.
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Under the agreement, Air Canada will place its AC code on select routes operated by ITA Airways from Rome's Fiumicino airport.
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The flights include five destinations in Italy, three in Africa as well as Tirana, Albania, and Tel Aviv.
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Alberta auditor general questions if parents received proper daycare subsidies
Alberta auditor general questions if parents received proper daycare subsidies

CBC

time2 minutes ago

  • CBC

Alberta auditor general questions if parents received proper daycare subsidies

Parents and guardians may not always be receiving the daycare subsidies they are entitled to, according to a review by Alberta's auditor general. Likewise, child-care workers who are entitled to wage top-ups through the Canada-Alberta child-care agreement may not be receiving the full amount they are due, Auditor General Doug Wylie has found. Wylie said the Alberta government did not consistently ensure child-care operators that collected provincial subsidies and federal grants to reduce the cost of child care passed that fund on to parents and employees. "The goals of this program are affordable, quality child care in the province, and we believe that Albertans should have confidence that these funds are achieving the program's purpose," Wylie said in a Thursday interview, after releasing a series of reports. The province spent $1.1 billion of provincial and federal funding in 2023-24 on programs designed to make child care more affordable for families and retain child-care workers. Alberta is in its final year of a five-year agreement with the federal government, which is supposed to expand the number of child-care spaces and reduce the average cost of pre-school age child care to $10 a day. The province cancelled the provincial child-care subsidy program on April 1 of this year. Wylie's team studied claims made by 25 Alberta child-care operators during a two-year period. In one month, at least 14 of the operators had discrepancies between the grant funding they claimed and the accounting of hours of child care provided or workers' hours, the report said. One operator overstated a claim that netted them $26,000 more than they should have been paid, the auditor found. The team found the provincial government wasn't routinely checking whether children's attendance matched the grant claims, whether children were recorded in the right age category, whether worker hours were accurate or whether the money was passed on to parents or workers. In some cases, they said, a child was counted twice. Wylie's team recommended the responsible ministry verify the claims are accurate and check that operators are using the money how they're supposed to. Assistant auditor general Patty Hayes said in an interview that a few daycares presented families with detailed descriptions of how the grants were applied to reduce their fees, but many did not. Parents are within their rights to ask the government or their daycare provider for an explanation of how the grants reduced their fees. The auditor said his team's work was delayed by the responsibility for child care being moved between three different ministers and departments in the last two years. In a Thursday statement, Education and Childcare Minister Demetrios Nicolaides, who assumed responsibility for the file in May, said he's working with department officials to make grant claims more streamlined and accountable. The ministry will also introduce child care participant numbers for each child to improve accountability, he said. "We have made extensive changes to manage the unprecedented influx of public funding into our child-care system since the audit review period, but we know there is more work to do," Nicolaides' statement said. The minister has also hired an audit firm to investigate irregularities, Nicolaides's press secretary said in an email. The NDP's child care, child and family services critic Diana Batten said the province's difficulty ensuring daycare centres and day homes were accountable for the funding shows the Alberta government did not take the program seriously. "It's just incredibly frustrating," Batten said. "I hear from parents. I hear from operators. This program is incredibly important and to see this complete disrespect of the program … it's just par for the course." Batten said she worries the government will try to blame child-care operators for any missing money rather than making the system more user-friendly. The auditor's findings could also put the funding agreement with the federal government at risk, she said. Government paid millions in aid to ineligible businesses Wylie's team also revisited previous recommendations made to the Ministry of Jobs, Economy, Trade and Innovation about a COVID-19 pandemic era emergency grant. The small and medium enterprise relaunch grant (SMERG) provided more than $670 million to more than 48,000 small and medium businesses subject to pandemic health restrictions that lost more than 30 per cent of their revenue. The auditor says the government wanted to act quickly, and allocated the grants before verifying the business was eligible for funding. It classified recipients as low or high risk for being ineligible. When the auditor checked more than 1,000 business' records in 2022, staff found more than half of SMERG recipients shouldn't have qualified for the funding. The government estimates it gave out between $52.5 million and $105 million in grants to businesses that should not have been eligible. However, Wylie's team said that number could be as high as $158 million. The government has tried to recoup some of the money, and claimed back $1.4 million so far, the auditor general says. However, Wylie said the government stopped those efforts when it could spend more money trying to get the money back than it was likely to recoup. "Benefit programs should verify applicant eligibility before making payments," Wylie said. "Not doing so can waste a significant amount of Albertans' money." The auditor general found the province made a similar mistake when granting emergency isolation payments to people who couldn't work because they were ill with COVID-19 or caring for someone who was. Further, Wylie said the government has reported little information to Albertans about whether SMERG was a successful program. "The effectiveness of programs shouldn't be measured only by how quickly money gets held the door, but by whether the program delivers the results it was designed to achieve," Wylie said. In a statement, Jobs Minister Joseph Schow said the government created SMERG in 2020 to urgently help businesses to stay afloat.

Burning cash: Sask. insurance agencies dealing with glut of wildfire insurance claims
Burning cash: Sask. insurance agencies dealing with glut of wildfire insurance claims

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Burning cash: Sask. insurance agencies dealing with glut of wildfire insurance claims

Social Sharing As wildfires continue to tear through northern Saskatchewan, insurance companies are starting to feel the heat. Insurance companies expect the fire season to run April to September. But while they often affect less-populated areas farther north, this year that has not entirely been the case, said Emily Proulx, branch manager for Hub International in Prince Albert. Proulx said she has noticed an uptick in claims made across the province from areas like Denare Beach, La Ronge and Flin Flon. While most people tend to purchase coverage for their homes, not everyone understands the full scope of it, especially when it comes to emergency situations. Many insurance companies have a moratorium during certain seasons, including wildfire season, when coverage cannot be changed or increased, Proulx said. She said fire insurance cannot be added if a fire is already burning within a certain distance of a property or there is a "threat." Proulx used Candle Lake as an example. "There's a fire burning within that 50 kilometres or whatever," she said. "There's no negotiation with the insurance company to say, 'Can you add coverage?' The answer is flat out 'no.'" Knowing your policy Craig Stewart, vice-president of climate change and federal issues for the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said the priority is "making sure that our customers are prepared and that the people that need insurance can still get it and that the insurance coverages are what people need." "Most people expect it never to happen to them, so it's very important to be prepared in case it does," Stewart said. That includes taking photographs and inventory of what's in your home and identifying what is most valuable. "If you get to the point where you need to unfortunately evacuate, file a claim … sometimes you can't get back to your home to be able to demonstrate what was there," Stewart said. He said most people who have "full replacement value" in their policy can have their homes rebuilt. 700 wildfire related claims, SGI Canada says Since May, there have been close to 700 wildfire-related claims made to SGI Canada involving mass evacuation claims, total loss of house, cabin fires or houses with fire damage that are still standing. SGI Canada said its auto fund has also received more than 300 claims, with most being a total loss. "It's too early to tell what kind of impact this wildfire season will have, but as extreme weather events become more frequent and severe, the insurance industry as a whole will be affected," said a spokesperson for SGI Canada in an email to CBC. "Losses due to wildfires, floods, wind and hailstorms continue to trend upwards. Mitigation measures and construction resiliency will be key to stabilizing insurance rates going forward."

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