Jordan Press
Reporter with The Canadian Press
About Jordan Press
Provinces asking feds for $138 million to help buy out flooded properties
Flood-ravaged provinces are asking the federal government to provide almost $138 million to move or buy out homeowners affected by previous years' inundations, according to new data that gives a glimpse into the national costs of helping residents leave floodplains.
Senate committee recommends Beyak suspension over letters on Indigenous Peoples
The Senate's ethics committee recommended on Tuesday, April 30, 2019, that Sen. Lynn Beyak be suspended without pay over incendiary letters about Indigenous Peoples she posted to her website.
In pre-budget letter, Hajdu asks Ontario to reverse student-loan changes
The federal labour minister is asking the Ontario government to reverse changes to its provincial student-assistance program in a letter that serves as a pre-budget salvo against Premier Doug Ford's Progressive Conservatives.
SNC-Lavalin warned of U.S. move, slashing workforce if no plea deal, documents show
The documents, part of a PowerPoint presentation obtained by The Canadian Press, describe something called "Plan B" — what Montreal-based SNC might have to do if it can't convince the government to grant a so-called remediation agreement to avoid criminal proceedings in a fraud and corruption case related to projects in Libya.
Liberals promise tax credit, EI benefit to help workers
Canadians could soon be putting $250 a year in federal tax credits toward better skills, while getting federal help to pay the bills.
Feds eye special skills-training savings account as part of budget: source
The federal Liberal government's fourth budget will include measures to help Canadians cover their bills if they choose to head back to school to boost their skills or change careers, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said on Thursday, March 14, 2019.
CMHC sets target to make housing affordable for every Canadian by 2030
A federal housing agency hopes to see every Canadian with an affordable home by 2030 and has offered up a plan full of experiments to make it happen.
Wilson-Raybould asked me if I would tell her what to do with SNC case: Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it was former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould who asked him in the fall if he planned to tell her what to do in the prosecution of Quebec engineering giant SNC-Lavalin — a conversation, he says, that ended with him telling her any decision was hers alone.
Almost half of EI sickness-benefit recipients off work longer than help lasts
An internal government survey of people who used federal sickness benefits has found that nearly half were unable to work for longer than the 15 weeks the benefits last.
Liberals set to decide on future of Social Security Tribunal: sources
Federal cabinet ministers will soon decide whether and how to reform the oft-maligned tribunal Canadians use to appeal federal benefits rulings, potentially undoing changes made six years ago intended to make it work better.