麻豆传媒

Skip to content

Federal emergency funding crucial to hometowns

While Municipalities of Saskatchewan is appreciative of the federal government fast tracking federal gas tax funding, hometowns require additional emergency funding to continue providing the services residents rely on daily.

While Municipalities of Saskatchewan is appreciative of the federal government fast tracking federal gas tax funding, hometowns require additional emergency funding to continue providing the services residents rely on daily.

鈥淭he advance of the federal gas tax funding will help municipalities in the short-term,鈥 said Municipalities of Saskatchewan President Gordon Barnhart. 鈥淏ut as our hometowns are hard at work to support residents through this pandemic, they are being hit with new expenses and experiencing significant drops in revenue. Emergency funding is needed, so we can continue to deliver vital services.鈥

Municipalities of Saskatchewan supported the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) and called for at least $10 billion in emergency operating funding.

FCM data showed municipalities faced a minimum of $10-15 billion in near-term, non-recoverable losses due to COVID-19. While facing significant losses, Saskatchewan鈥檚 hometowns continued to provide essential services and are working to ease financial burdens for local residents and businesses.

鈥淪askatchewan鈥檚 hometowns are deferring tax increases, delaying utility and tax payments, and providing programs like Moose Jaw鈥檚 Small Business Support Program,鈥 said Fraser Tolmie, City of Moose Jaw mayor and chair of the Municipalities of Saskatchewan City Mayors鈥 Caucus. 鈥淥ur municipalities require federal help, so we can continue to ensure the health and safety of our communities during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.鈥

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks