Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Will Get Infrastructure Cash Despite Vote Outcome In Metro Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2015 10:04 AM
  • B.C. Will Get Infrastructure Cash Despite Vote Outcome In Metro Vancouver
VANCOUVER — Industry Minister James Moore says British Columbia will get its fair share of federal infrastructure funding regardless of the outcome of a Metro Vancouver transit tax vote.
 
Speaking to a gathering of business leaders, Moore said the federal government would provide the province with promised investment dollars whether or not voters approve the historic transit plebiscite.
 
A proposed $7.5-billion public transportation overhaul over 10 years would include projects such as an upgraded rapid-transit system, a new bridge and additional buses.
 
"We know that our cities are getting more dense and more congested," said Moore, who was in Vancouver for a meeting with members of the B.C. Business Council.
 
The technically non-binding plebiscite gives citizens the option of a 0.5-per-cent sales tax increase to raise money to finance the massive investment.
 
Ballots were mailed out in mid-March and must be submitted by May 29.
 
 
As the Yes and No sides jockey for position, residents are trying to balance traffic woes in a growing region with what some are calling a tax grab.
 
Proponents say the upgrades are crucial to accommodate an estimated influx of one million people to the Vancouver region over the next three decades.
 
Opponents have condemned TransLink, the region's transit authority, as wasting taxpayers' money.
 
Moore pointed to $53 billion of cross-Canada infrastructure funding that the federal government has promised over the next 10 years through the New Canada Building Plan.
 
He also highlighted a yearly $1-billion public transit fund targeted for big cities and announced in Tuesday's budget.
 
Moore said provinces are not restricted to spending the new funding exclusively on public transit and that the money can be used for infrastructure including roads, bridges and tunnels.

MORE National ARTICLES

Prime Minister Harper Announces Consolidation Of Federal Payroll Centres

Prime Minister Stephen Harper made the announcement today in Miramichi, where he said one facility will be responsible for consolidating the public service's payroll system in an effort to save money.

Prime Minister Harper Announces Consolidation Of Federal Payroll Centres

Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability
OTTAWA — Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre will not intervene to ensure a terminally ill Alberta man denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits finally gets his payments.

Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual

Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual
Finance Minister Joe Oliver will deliver the latest federal budget on April 21. The budget — Oliver's first, but the 10th for the Harper government — comes later than usual. The government attributed the delay to the volatile oil price situation.

Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual

Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside

Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside
Supt. Mike Porteous says federal organized crime investigators and the RCMP assisted in serving search warrants in the city and in New Westminster, Coquitlam, Surrey and Maple Ridge. The total value of the seizures is estimated at $1.8 million.

Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside

Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal

Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Divers who examined an icebreaker that struck a rocky shoal off Newfoundland and began taking on water found a 20 centimetre-wide puncture in its hull, the coast guard said Thursday.

Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal

Death Of Five Cree Hunters In Quebec Fire An 'Unfathomable Loss'

Death Of Five Cree Hunters In Quebec Fire An 'Unfathomable Loss'
CHIBOUGAMAU, Que. — Five Cree hunters from northern Quebec have died in a cabin fire in a tragedy described by the Cree leader as an "unfathomable loss."

Death Of Five Cree Hunters In Quebec Fire An 'Unfathomable Loss'