Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Government Looking At Speeding Up Promised Infrastructure Spending

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2016 12:01 PM
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is "actively considering" speeding up promised investments in infrastructure in a bid to stimulate Canada's rapidly deteriorating economy.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised during last fall's election campaign to pump an additional $60 billion over 10 years into infrastructure projects.
     
    But less than half that money — $17.4 billion — was earmarked to flow during the Liberals' first mandate.
     
    The platform committed to spending an extra $5 billion for each of the first two years and $3.45 billion in each of the next two years.
     
    However, The Canadian Press has learned the government is now looking at moving up the spending schedule, pushing the money out faster in response to worsening economic conditions.
     
    Commodity prices have continued to slide, the dollar has nosedived and already sluggish economic growth has slowed to a crawl in the three months since Trudeau won election on a platform focused on stimulating the economy and improving the lot of middle class Canadians.
     
    The details of any new infrastructure spending will be unveiled in the federal budget, likely sometime in mid to late March.
     
    The deteriorating situation has already forced the Liberals to rethink their pledge to run up deficits of no more than $10 billion in each of the first three years of their mandate. Trudeau has downgraded that promise to a "goal."
     
     
    While they may yet have to scale back some of their other pricey campaign promises, Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau have doubled down on the infrastructure spending, arguing that the worsening economic picture only reinforces the need to stimulate growth.
     
    "There has just never been a better time to make targeted investments to support economic growth in this country," Morneau said Tuesday during a pre-budget tour stop in Montreal.
     
    Last week, Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz also weighed in, calling infrastructure spending an "important ingredient" in economic growth.
     
    Sources say the Liberals are looking at speeding up infrastructure spending — "actively considering" it, in the words of one insider — but they want to ensure they go beyond the gazebos, park upgrades, public washrooms and beautification projects that were funded in Ontario's cottage country in advance of the 2010 G8 summit.
     
    The Liberal platform talked about investing in more ambitious projects with long-term benefits: public transit, affordable housing, seniors' facilities, child care, "climate resilient" infrastructure, flood mitigation and wastewater systems.
     
    Infrastructure Minister Amarjeet Sohi said Wednesday the government is looking at expediting spending on projects already queued to receive federal cash through existing infrastructure funds.
     
    "We have billions of dollars that we have not spent over the last two years that we can expedite this year and next year, as well as going through the budget process to allocate the additional $60 billion."
     
    Sohi has said funding will flow to shovel-ready projects that cities and provinces identify as priorities.
     
    He said the government is asking cities and provinces to finalize the list of priority projects so they can be quickly reviewed and green-lighted for funding. Those projects, he said, need not be new work, but revamping existing infrastructure.
     
     
     
    "If we can do things more quickly in those areas, those are the things that we are also going to be looking at," he said.
     
    Some critics have already questioned how the Liberals will find enough worthwhile, shovel-ready projects on which to spend the $5 billion promised for infrastructure this year, much less any additional money. Still others have wondered whether the Liberals should loosen their restrictions to spread the new cash equally between transit, "green" project and "social" infrastructure.
     
    Those kind of details will be finalized after consultations with provinces and cities, Sohi said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence
    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy has finally begun testifying in his own defence against 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery.

    Sen. Mike Duffy Finally Takes To Witness Box To Testify In Own Defence

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout
    In just weeks, barring an extension from the Supreme Court that would alter the timetable, Canadian doctors will enter a new era in the practice of medicine — one that gives them the legal right to help patients with unbearable suffering to end their lives.

    Physician, Heal Thyself: MDs Willing To Help Patients Die May Face Emotional Fallout

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women
    OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government is kicking off what it calls the first phase of its inquiry into the tragic phenomenon of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.

    Liberals Launch First Phase Of Inquiry Into Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Halifax Astronomer Catches Rare Image Of Booster Re-entering Atmosphere

    Halifax Astronomer Catches Rare Image Of Booster Re-entering Atmosphere
    A Halifax-based astronomer is the envy of his peers after he photographed a rare image in the skies from his balcony Sunday evening.

    Halifax Astronomer Catches Rare Image Of Booster Re-entering Atmosphere

    Four Mounties Suspended In New Brunswick Over Discreditable Conduct Allegations

    Four Mounties Suspended In New Brunswick Over Discreditable Conduct Allegations
    The Mounties say they are acting on information that resulted in three suspensions in early November.

    Four Mounties Suspended In New Brunswick Over Discreditable Conduct Allegations

    Police In Grenada Search For New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared While Jogging

    Police In Grenada Search For New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared While Jogging
    ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Police in Grenada are searching the small Caribbean island for a missing woman from New Brunswick who disappeared while out jogging with her dog.

    Police In Grenada Search For New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared While Jogging