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District of Hope gets $1.83 million in economic restart cash from upper levels of government

FVRD gets $1.36 million out of $425 million distributed provincewide
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Premier John Horgan and Minister of Finance Carole James announce B.C.’s Economic Recovery Plan during a press conference at Phillips Brewery in Victoria, B.C., on Sept. 17, 2020. (The Canadian Press/Chad Hipolito)

The District of Hope is receiving $1.83 million as part of federal and provincial government pandemic economic restart cash.

The money being distributed to municipalities across B.C. is part of the federal government’s “Safe Restart Agreement”, a federal investment of more than $19 billion to the provinces to “safely restart their economies and make our country more resilient to possible future surges in cases of COVID-19.”

The provincial government then distributed $425 million to the municipalities and regional districts through its economic recovery plan announced in September.

• READ MORE: B.C. will match $1 billion from Ottawa to help jump start the pandemic economy

• READ MORE: B.C.’s COVID-19 economic recovery plan: Top 5 things you need to know

The Fraser Valley Regional District gets $1.36 million in the dole out.

“I am very pleased to see the speed at which the federal and provincial governments have delivered this funding to local governments in B.C.,” Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) president Brian Frenkel said in a press release.

“Since the beginning of the pandemic, local governments have taken steps to manage costs and rethink budgets, but communities are contending with significant revenue shortfalls. These funds will be available for immediate use and provide greater clarity as budgets are developed for the coming year.”

The federal/provincial funding will support facility reopening and operational costs along with local emergency response.

Funding details are still being developed for additional funding through the Safe Restart Agreement, according to the UBCM press release. This includes additional funding for B.C. local governments, including $100 million to support local governments as they address the needs of vulnerable populations and $15 million to improve development approval processes.

-Files from Emelie Peacock