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CEBA loan extension
Photo: File
Small businesses on Main St. in Osoyoos.
Canada’s premiers have sent a joint letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking the federal government to extend the repayment period for a year for interest-free loans given to small businesses and non-profits during the pandemic.
The federal government’s Canada Emergency Business Account offered interest-free loans of up to $60,000 to small businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Ryan Duffy, President, South Okanagan Chamber of Commerce said his chapter fully supports an extension of the CEBA Loan Repayment to help businesses that need it as financial pressures keep mounting for them.
“Our local businesses were hit by weather challenges, serious fires, highway closures and a dismal end to our summer season with the announcement for hotels to be vacated unnecessarily. We all need to find ways to support our local businesses as they still have a rough road ahead of them.”
B.C. Premier David Eby says in a letter to the prime minister that small businesses, like most other Canadians, are feeling squeezed by the rising cost of housing, groceries and other daily essentials, and just when they are starting to recover after the pandemic they are facing higher inflation and interest rates.
The repayment deadline for CEBA loans to qualify for partial loan forgiveness is Jan. 18, 2024.
The emergency business program approved $49.2 billion in loans to small businesses and not-for-profits during the pandemic.
The letter follows the recent request by premiers Doug Ford of Ontario and Andrew Furey of Newfoundland and Labrador, that the Bank of Canada consider the human impact of further rate increases and the potential for additional increases to drive up housing costs.
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