Federal government faces costly path to recoup wrongly paid aid, auditor says
OTTAWA — The federal auditor general says the government missed chances to flag fraudulent claims for emergency benefits last year, potentially paying money to insolvent companies, and will now have to rely on costly, years-long efforts to recoup the money.
Those efforts will begin this spring for the $97.6-billion Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy, and this fall for the $74-billion Canada Emergency Response Benefit.
Auditor general Karen Hogan’s reviews of the programs released Thursday noted how quickly the programs rolled out last March and April, eschewing the usual months-long policy-development process to quickly get aid to businesses and workers hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.
She acknowledged the government prioritized speed in paying aid, rolling out the programs in record time under extraordinary circumstances, and always intended to review claims after-the-fact to claw back wrongful payments.


