Ottawa tech CEOs sign open letter to Premier Ford asking for COVID-19 support | Unpublished
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Ottawa tech CEOs sign open letter to Premier Ford asking for COVID-19 support

March 27, 2020

From CEOs of leading innovation economy enterprises

Date: March 25, 2020

To: Hon. Doug Ford, Premier of Ontario

Hon. Rod Phillips, Minister of Finance

Hon. Victor Fedeli, Minister of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade

Dear Premier Ford and Ministers Phillips and Fedeli,

Ontario is a technology powerhouse. With strong support from governments, our tech andinnovation sectors have stepped up to the plate and emerged as important sources of well-paying jobs, economic growth and our provincial GDP.

Tech employment has grown rapidly across Ontario. Toronto is the fastest-growing tech market overall, surpassing Washington, Seattle and San Francisco combined – with a total of 241,000 tech industry jobs in the GTA alone. Waterloo and Hamilton tech employment has grown 40% over the past five years. Ottawa has the second-highest concentration of tech talent in North America, with 9.9% of its workforce employed in this sector – just behind San Francisco. And these are good jobs. Across the industry, tech wages in Ontario averaged $78,070 in 2018 –

51% higher than the average private-sector wage. This didn’t just happen. The growth of Ontario’s tech sector is a success story shared by successive governments stretching back to the creation of MaRS and Communitech under the Harris government and continuing to the present day. Now, all this hard work and economic impact is threatened by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Ontario government has already responded with swift action and the deployment of some critical resources. But more is needed.

Without further intervention, many promising new ventures that are tackling everything from climate change to cancer treatments and vaccines may be forced to close their doors over the next 12 to 18 months. The pinch is already happening: Supply chains are being disrupted and consumer spending is slowing, creating economic risk for our province. Ontario’s tech leaders believe the ecosystem needs our provincial government to continue to show leadership by taking immediate and longer-term measures to weather this storm, and drive innovation, economic growth and job creation through the recovery.

These measures include:

  • Supporting the immediate cash-flow needs of companies to reduce expenditures, preserve
  • cash and maintain top talent and jobs;
  • Increasing and rapidly deploying additional funding through established programs and
  • investment vehicles;
  • Providing greater flexibility for companies with an existing funding relationship and track
  • record, to enable the tech ecosystem to continue innovating.

Ontario’s tech sector was created with the help of the provincial government, but maintaining momentum requires this government to sustain its support during this time of crisis. That’s why innovation hubs and tech groups are sending this letter to the province, urging support for these companies in the coming months. We are calling for swift, targeted measures that will help companies improve cash flow and keep tens of thousands of Ontarians employed.

Focused, collaborative action will help high-growth, innovative tech companies to emerge from this crisis in position to grow Ontario’s economy and create jobs.

PROPOSED ASSISTANCE MEASURES FOR ONTARIO’S INNOVATION ECONOMY

There are a number of ways the Ontario government can continue to strengthen the tech sector through the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. These include:

supporting the immediate cash-flow needs of companies to reduce expenditures, preserve cash and maintain top talent, jobs and:

  • Offering generous payroll subsidies – at least 70 percent of wages – similar to subsidies already offered in England and Denmark
  • Deferring payroll taxes, and deferring remittance of corporate and payroll taxes together with no-interest, deferred payment loan vehicles for businesses
  • Allowing the deferral of WSIB premiums
  • Increasing procurement of goods and services from Ontario ventures, and requiring recipients of stimulus funding to prioritize the adoption of made-in Ontario innovations
  • Implementing measures for rent abatement and interest-free credit availability including the creation of a no-interest, deferred payment loan vehicle for businesses. Increasing and rapidly deploying additional funding through established programs and investment vehicles:
  • Rapidly deploying additional funding to current recipients that can demonstrate proven track records for delivery, enabling them to immediately address cash-flow challenges
  • Building our strong pipeline of high-growth firms by continuing to invest in promising startups through the MaRS IAF, and providing additional support to later-stage firms Providing greater flexibility for companies with an existing funding relationship and track record, enabling the tech ecosystem to continue to innovate:
  • Creating more flexible funding terms, conditions and schedules for companies that currently benefit from government funding, and the network of Regional Innovation Centres that support them, enabling companies to address key challenges and adapt to rapidly changing market conditions
  • Retaining the Ontario Innovation Tax Credit (OITC) and the Ontario Research and Development Tax Credit (ORDTC), and working with the federal government to accelerate reimbursement through SR&ED, OITC and ORDTC. More broadly, we believe the government of Ontario is ideally positioned to further influence important federal measures as outlined in this document:

https://www.marsdd.com/media-centre/letter-tech-leaders-appeal-for-great...

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