National Post

Budget brings support for hard-hit tourism and travel sectors

$1.5B BOOST

- Stefanie Marotta

The pandemic-battered travel and tourism industries will receive about $1.5 billion in targeted support from the federal budget as the Trudeau government attempts to boost jobs and revive the economy.

The two sectors have been among the hardest hit due to restrictio­ns and closures to help prevent the spread of COVID-19, with events cancelled and planes grounded. To help revive the beleaguere­d industries as the pandemic unwinds, the federal budget earmarked $1 billion for the tourism industry and $465 million for air travel and airports.

“It means providing support where COVID has struck hardest — to women, to young people, to low-wage workers, and to small and medium-sized businesses, especially in hospitalit­y and tourism,” Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said on Monday.

The budget includes $82.5 million this year for Transport Canada to help large Canadian airports invest in COVID-19 testing infrastruc­ture, with an additional $105.3 million over five years to develop touchless and secure air travel technology with internatio­nal partners. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority will also receive $6.7 million to purchase sanitizati­on equipment.

Passengers typically make up about 90 per cent of airport revenue, but during the pandemic, travel plummeted to 10 per cent of normal levels while airports remained open to manage essential travellers and cargo. As a result, Canada’s airports expect to have lost $5.5 billion in revenues while adding $2.8 billion in pandemic-related debt by the end the year, according to the Canadian Airport Council.

“Canada clamped down on travel to keep Canadians safe, which has had an immediate and devastatin­g impact on the air sector and prospects for post-pandemic recovery,” Canadian Airport Council president Daniel-robert Gooch said in a press release last week.

In an attempt to meet its goal of creating one million jobs by the end of this year, the federal government is spending $1 billion over three years to support festivals, local cultural celebratio­ns, concerts, exhibits and live shows.

The pandemic has decimated local tourism industries across the country. The number of active businesses in the sector dropped by nine per cent between January and November of last year, according to a March report by Destinatio­n Canada.

Large national festivals — including Toronto’s Canadian National Exhibition, Vancouver’s Pacific National Exhibition and the Calgary Stampede — have struggled to maintain leases and pay what staff remain after layoffs without being able to host in-person events. Last year, the Canadian Associatio­n of Fairs and Exhibition­s asked for $74 million to help fairs, exhibition­s and agricultur­al societies survive.

The investment in travel and tourism comes one week after the federal government announced a $5.9-billion relief package for Air Canada, with further investment­s in Canada’s airlines to be announced at a later date.

Monday’s announceme­nt marks the first federal budget since before the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

THIS STRENGTHEN­ING OF THE RULES ON INTEREST DEDUCTIBIL­ITY WILL ENSURE THAT LARGE COMPANIES PAY THEIR FAIR SHARE AND BRING CANADA IN LINE WITH OTHER JURISDICTI­ONS, INCLUDING ALL OUR G7 PEERS. — THE FEDERAL BUDGET

 ?? ERNEST DOROSZUK / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? The CNE in Toronto has struggled due to the pandemic, but is part of the festivals which will share in budget
funds in Monday’s federal budget.
ERNEST DOROSZUK / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES The CNE in Toronto has struggled due to the pandemic, but is part of the festivals which will share in budget funds in Monday’s federal budget.

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