PM announces $52M for 'innovation network' between Waterloo, Toronto and Ottawa
Network will link Ontario's 'top innovation hubs,' Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in Kitchener
The federal government is investing $52.4 million in an innovation network that is expected to create 18,000 skilled jobs in Waterloo, Toronto and Ottawa.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the funding for the new "Scale-up Platform" program for tech companies at the Communitech technology hub in Kitchener, Ont., on Tuesday.
The federal government says the platform will be the first of its kind in Canada, and it will incorporate the skills of Ontario's "top innovation hubs": Communitech, in Kitchener, the MaRS Discovery District in Toronto and Invest Ottawa.
The three will work with tech companies to grow their businesses.
The government said it expects the platform will help 30 Ontario companies, create 18,000 skilled jobs "and achieve revenues of $100 million or more by 2024."
"For the first time in decades, we have a crop of scale-ready firms that are on the path to $100 million. Our job — through the Scale-up Platform — is to help those high-growth firms find the talent and capital to accelerate their growth," said Iain Klugman, President and CEO of Communitech.
"We need to pool our expertise, our networks, and our resources to help them compete globally and create good-paying jobs for Canadians."
This is one of many stops made by the prime minister this winter and spring, talking about jobs and the economy as his party prepares to launch its campaign for the federal election coming up in October.
- JAN. 9: Justin Trudeau talks jobs, economy and pipeline expansion in Kamloops, B.C.
- JAN 10: Trudeau questioned on pipelines, carbon tax, Indigenous rights in Regina town hall
- JAN 18: Trudeau asked about immigration, climate change and dairy in Quebec town hall
Town hall Tuesday
Later Tuesday, Trudeau will host a community town hall in nearby Cambridge, Ont.
The prime minister will be joined by four local Liberal MPs: Bardish Chagger of Waterloo, Raj Saini of Kitchener Centre, Marwan Tabbara of Kitchener South-Hespeler and Bryan May of Cambridge.
A release, posted to the websites of all the local Liberal MPs involved says the town hall will discuss jobs, growing the economy and building a "stronger, more resilient middle class."
With files from the CBC's Kate Bueckert