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Matching Fiona relief donations from Ottawa not yet delivered to Red Cross

Funds promised by Ottawa to help the Canadian Red Cross with relief efforts following post-tropical storm Fiona have not yet been received.

Federal government says work ongoing to share the final amount

Houses along the coastline damaged by a severe tropical storm.
About 100 houses in Port aux Basques were condemned as a result of post-tropical storm Fiona, but some money promised by the federal government has yet to arrive. (Malone Mullin/CBC)

Funds promised by Ottawa to help the Canadian Red Cross with relief efforts following post-tropical storm Fiona have not yet been received.

Public Safety Canada promised in September to match donations received by the Red Cross through the charity's fundraising appeal between Sept. 24 and Oct. 31.

Work is ongoing "to finalize the donations during this period eligible for federal fund matching, and to share the final amount raised thanks to the generosity of Canadians from coast to coast to coast," said department spokesperson Tim Warmington in an email Thursday.

Two people walk wearing windbreakers walk next to a pile of rubble and a building with the siding partially fallen off.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and N.L. Premier Andrew Furey toured the damage caused by Fiona in Port aux Basques. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian Red Cross says it has provided the federal government with a summary of the donations it feels are eligible to be matched.

"It's then the prerogative of the federal government, not the Red Cross, to announce the amount government has approved as a matching contribution," said charity spokesperson Dan Bedell in an email Wednesday.

Post-tropical storm Fiona tore through the East Coast on the morning of Sept. 24, causing widespread damage in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador. The storm knocked down trees and power lines across Atlantic Canada, and it washed away several homes in southwestern Newfoundland.

A home with severe damage in Port aux Basques. The front door, windows and a portion of the first floor are all blown out.
One of the homes heavily damaged by Fiona still stands three months later in Port aux Basques. Several condemned properties have yet to be demolished. (Waqas Chughtai/CBC News)

In Port aux Basques, N.L., a community of approximately 3,500 people, about 100 homes have been condemned because of the destruction wrought by Fiona. Most of those homeowners have been denied coverage from their insurance providers. 

The Red Cross launched a fundraising campaign, called the Hurricane Fiona in Canada Appeal, to help those affected by the storm, which tore through places like Puerto Rico as a hurricane but was downgraded by the time it reached Canada.

As of Nov. 17, Bedell said the campaign had raised about $31 million in donations, about $27.3 million of which had been distributed or committed in the form of one-time $500 payments to affected households across the region. Almost all of the money went to Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, where many residents lost power.

Bedell said Wednesday he could not say how the agency spent the remainder of the donations, adding that discussions were ongoing with provincial governments about how to spend any remaining contributions.

"In due course we plan a publicly available update on the status of our Hurricane Fiona in Canada Appeal and how the funds have been spent," Bedell said.

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