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Conservative bungling delays local infrastructure dollars

Communities across Canada can't get access to promised federal dollars infrastructure priorities

To the editor:

We're well into the 2014 construction season.

The new "Building Canada" infrastructure fund (BCF) was supposed to be up-and-running on April 1, but not a wheel has turned.

Why?

It’s because of the Prime Minister Stephen Harper government bungling in Ottawa.

Communities across Canada can't get access to promised federal dollars for water and sewer projects, public transit and other infrastructure priorities because BCF application forms aren't yet available. The provinces, which are supposed to manage the process and pick the projects, haven't been able to get going because the feds held back crucial information until the very last minute.

So much for Infrastructure Minister Denis Lebel's boast last March that "the entire New Building Canada Plan is now open for business."

But it gets worse. The BCF program has been severely "back-end loaded." That means there's a big cut in federal funding right up front. The BCF has plummeted by 87 per cent – down from $1.6-billion last year to just $210 million for the whole country this year.

The feds say the money they've cut will be replenished, but it won't get back to last year's level until after 2019.

Cutting, stalling and complicating federal support for public infrastructure is simply foolish. It undermines what the Finance Department describes as the single most cost-effective tool to foster economic growth and more jobs.

And it comes at a time when unemployment is stubbornly high and some 200,000 Canadians have just given up looking for work altogether.

We can do better. Justin Trudeau is calling for a far more ambitious infrastructure plan for Canada – one that will be truly transformative.

Significant new investments will be required and strong collaboration at all levels, but the dividends will be powerful. Canada will be able to catch up faster on its debilitating infrastructure deficit.

We will drive greater job creation and economic growth, and convert the value of low interest rates into long-term capital assets to underpin better Canadian prosperity and productivity.

 

Ralph Goodale

Federal Liberal Party deputy leader