ASSISTANCE PROGRAM FOR LAC-MÉGANTIC

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ASSISTANCE PROGRAM FOR LAC-MÉGANTIC UPDATE - JULY 2014

DESCRIPTION OF THE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM FOR LAC-MÉGANTIC The Red Cross Assistance Program is designed to complement government help and items covered by insurance policies held by program recipients. The program is intended not to replace losses, but to address basic necessities such as shelter, food, clothing, personal care items, baby supplies, physical and psychological care requirements, transport, and job related and business resumption needs. It also covers the specific needs of workers who have lost their jobs, grieving families, and children who have lost one or both parents. Priorities for the type of assistance offered will first and foremost address the needs of the most vulnerable. One component of the program is devoted to stimulating the local economy and promoting the community s recovery. People served ASSISTANCE TO INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES Owners and tenants of destroyed or damaged homes who have returned home, and those who have not been able to Assistance may also be available for residents who have to move because of odours, noise or post-traumatic shock. Essential services: - Clothing - Personal services - Health care - Household products Accommodation: - Additional costs for temporary housing - Domestic items: dishes, kitchen utensils, bedding and linens, small appliances - Fit-up and clean-up costs: paint, minor jobs, miscellaneous purchases - Repair costs: purchases of materials, payments to contractors, equipment rentals - Clothing (laundry) - Toiletries and baby supplies - Registration for sports, cultural or extramural activities - Caretaker or school janitor costs - Baby supplies Healthcare needs: - First-aid kits - Pharmaceuticals - Replacement glasses, prostheses, mobility aids

ASSISTANCE TO INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES (CONTINUED) Transport costs - Transit tickets - Taxis - Gas for personal vehicles Sports and recreational articles Tools, uniforms and equipment - Work clothes, uniforms, essential employee-supplied work tools and equipment. Owners and tenants who had to be relocated after the demolition of their apartment building Owner-occupants of a destroyed primary residence - Assistance of up to $20,000 is available for reconstruction or the purchase of a new residence - Clothing (detergent) - Hygiene and baby care products Lodging: - Additional housing fees - Furnishing, repair, moving, or temporary storage costs - Hook-up costs (telephone, electricity, etc.) Reconstruction or moving costs Construction materials, payment of contractor, notary fees, utility hook-up costs, transfer taxes, land purchase, surveying fees, additional home insurance costs, moving and storage costs, septic tank and artesian well installation, etc. Recipients of healthcare, social and youth services, and services provided by local community organizations - Assistance will be designed to meet the transport needs of clients who no longer have access to services or for whom access is difficult because of street closures. Transport costs - Transit coupons will be distributed by local community organizations for use on city transit. - Gasoline for personal vehicles Workers who have lost less than seven days pay - Assistance will be designed to meet the priority needs of the workers family.

ASSISTANCE TO INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES (CONTINUED) Employees of businesses that have been destroyed or damaged and who have lost their jobs; and employees of businesses that cannot continue to operate because of the evacuation - Assistance will be designed to meet the priority needs of the worker s family, and the back-to-school needs of the children. Essential services: - Clothing - Toiletries and baby supplies Workers who have lost their jobs as an indirect result of the disaster, or who are unable to work for disaster-related health reasons - Clothing (detergent and clothing) - Hygiene and baby care products High school (general or vocational/dep), college, or university students who have lost their jobs Students needs: - Tuition - School supplies - Clothing Self-employed workers and owners of businesses that have been destroyed or damaged, and those that cannot continue to operate because of the evacuation (Provided this is their main source of income) - Assistance will be designed to meet the priority needs of the families of selfemployed workers and business owners, and the back-toschool needs of the children. - Assistance is also available for co-owners of businesses - Clothing - Personal care items and baby supplies

Self-employed workers and owners of businesses that have been destroyed or damaged, and those that cannot continue to operate because of the evacuation - Assistance will be designed to meet needs related to continuation or resumption of business operations. - Assistance will also be available to cover insurance deductibles. - Up to $7,000 per business will be available. - An additional $1,000 per month of inactivity will be distributed as of January 1, 2014. ASSISTANCE TO BUSINESSES Business subsistence costs Resumption of operations: - Furniture and office equipment - Purchase of goods, stationery and machinery - Construction contract costs for the new location First-aid kit Self-employed workers and business owners in the Du Granit RCM who have experienced a drop in business volume through the loss of contracts, clients or equipment as a result of the disaster - Assistance is intended for businesses with an annual turnover of up to $400,000. - Up to $5,000 per business may be allocated for the months of July December 2013, followed by $1,000 per subsequent month. Business continuance costs - Payment of invoices - Mortgage instalments - Other needs Economic recovery - $2.6 million will be allocated for projects designed to stimulate the community s economic recovery. - Assistance provided is designed to maintain or create jobs, to maintain or improve the output and diversity of the local economy, and to attract and retain workers. Projects involving businesses in the downtown core, and those that were relocated after the demolition of their premises. - For example, assistance for business relocation, including leasehold improvements and the purchase of equipment, furnishings and materials Group projects - Financial assistance for projects impacting businesses in Le Granit RCM Support and guidance for entrepreneurs - Financial assistance for consultations with economic experts 50,000 to develop business plans, budgets, etc. Individual projects - Financial assistance for projects involving businesses located in Le Granit RCM that will create jobs and improve the output and diversity of the local economy. Examples include start-ups of businesses that will create jobs and provide services not previously available locally.

Grieving families - Assistance is available to families who have lost one or more members as a result of the disaster. ASSISTANCE TO GRIEVING FAMILIES Funeral costs - Clothing (laundry) - Toiletries and baby supplies Transport costs: - Gasoline for personal vehicles Special project promoting recovery Assistance for the most vulnerable families will be extended according to the Red ASSISTANCE TO MINOR CHILDREN, OR THOSE STILL IN SCHOOL, WHO HAVE LOST ONE OR BOTH PARENTS Minor children, or those still in school, who have lost one or both parents - Assistance will be designed to help meet the immediate and future needs of the children. Support for the children of those who died - Registered Educational Savings Plan (RESP) or Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) (depending on certain criteria such as age, and whether or not they stay in school) - Registration for sports, cultural or extramural activities - Caretaker or school janitor costs - Sports and recreational articles, toys, event tickets or other wishes expressed by the children. Special project promoting integration into the new family Assistance for the most vulnerable children will be extended according to the Red

ASSISTANCE TO ORGANIZATIONS Non-profit organizations whose premises have been destroyed or damaged, and those that cannot continue to operate because of the evacuation - Assistance will be designed to meet needs related to continuation or resumption of operations - Assistance will also be available to cover insurance deductibles. - Up to $7,000 per organization will be available. Subsistence costs Resumption of operations: - Furniture and office equipment - Purchase of goods, stationery and machinery - Construction contract costs for the new location First-aid kit Non-profit organizations - Assistance will be designed to enable non-profit organizations to continue or even expand their capacity to provide services. The threat of closure, or the expansion of activities, must be disasterrelated. - $1,050,000 will be allocated to program development and the hiring of appropriate human resources. Conditional on submission of projects by non-profit organizations ASSISTANCE FOR HEALTHCARE AND SOCIAL SERVICES IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES CENTRE (CSSS) All groups covered by the assistance program, and community members who require it. - $1,8 million will be set aside for program development and the hiring of appropriate human resources. The program will be designed to complement regular programs and those developed by the CSSS specifically in response to needs generated by the disaster. The program will be designed to relieve the effects of stress and anxiety and to cover the following needs, among others: individual and group psychosocial support, guidance for families struggling to cope, home care, home alterations for persons with disabilities, respite care, counselors assigned to organizations that run assistance programs.

ASSISTANCE TO THE COMMUNITY Community recovery and reconstruction - $2 million will be devoted to projects that promote the sustainable reconstruction of the community environment. Disaster prevention and readiness - $200,000 will be allocated to provide the community with tools and means to increase its resilience in emergency situations. Support for projects and infrastructure related to recovery and reconstruction with the help of various local partners (Town of Lac-Mégantic, business and community groups). Information and training for the public and for emergency responders so that they may be better prepared to respond to disasters. In addition, this component may include information for businesses on business continuity planning. Community support - Up to $100,000 is available for this component. With the help of local partners and organizations, projects are being developed to organize various activities that encourage public and family gatherings. For example, the Red Cross supported activities organized during the 2013 holiday season and commemorative events in July 2014 thanks to this component. ASSISTANCE TO SCHOOLS (YOUTH AND ADULTS) Programs for schools at all levels - $400,000 is available for program development and the hiring of specialized and dedicated human resources. Program developed in cooperation with the local school board, the Commission scolaire des Hauts-Cantons, for elementary and high schools and for Business Services, and the Cégep Beauce-Appalaches. REDCROSS.CA