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Cities Ask For Gas-Tax Fund Boost In 100-day Wish List For Trudeau Government

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2019 09:05 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada's cities say the federal Liberals are willing to find creative ways to remove political roadblocks from provinces to fund billions in municipal projects, a sign of hope that comes as they ask Ottawa for more money and new ways to fund local work.

     

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, his deputy Chrystia Freeland and other newly named cabinet ministers have given "very clear signals" about easing the flow of funds as part of their conversations with city leaders, said Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson.

     

    Iveson's comments came near the end of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities' conference in Ottawa this week, which will include a meeting with Trudeau this afternoon.

     

    The federal government has a number of options to make the money move, Iveson said, pointing to the doubling of the gas-tax funding this year, which the Liberals called a one-time arrangement to do an end-around on problematic provinces.

     

    It will be up to the Trudeau Liberals to lean on provinces to remove hurdles — political or otherwise — that have held up federal spending and, in turn, local construction plans for things like affordable housing, said Iveson, who chairs the federation's caucus of mayors from the largest cities in Canada.

     

    "If there's an opportunity to do the right thing and help reduce demand for a costly provincial public service, surely provinces can come to the table and be partners," Iveson said Thursday.

     

    "And if they're not, then the federal government needs to use all the tools in its tool kit to drive them back in to productive nation-building conversation."

     

    What the country needs, he said, was "courageous leadership" from all levels of government.

     

    Cities are also hoping for billions in new spending and potential new powers.

     

    On Thursday, the federation released its wish list for the first 100 days of the Trudeau government's second mandate. The document urges the Liberals to boost annual increases to the gas-tax fund to 3.5 per cent from two per cent, and permanently double the value of the program to about $4 billion.

     

    The group also wants the government to eliminate caps on funding for transit rehab projects, allow other spending to help cities upgrade their council chambers and administrative buildings, and add $2 billion in new spending for projects that help communities adapt to climate change.

     

    It's also asking for tens of billions in new spending commitments, including $34 billion for transit over 10 years once the current agreement runs out in 2028.

     

    Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna told the gathering of municipal leaders on Wednesday that getting projects built quickly is her top priority.

     

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