Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Promises Plan For Cities, Joe Oliver Asks How It Will Be Funded

Darpan News Desk, 05 Jun, 2015 07:01 PM
    EDMONTON — Justin Trudeau promised Canada's big city mayors a new deal Friday, but Finance Minister Joe Oliver urged them to push the federal Liberal leader on how he plans to pay for it.
     
    Trudeau, speaking municipal leaders at the Federation of Canadian Municipalities meeting, promised an enlarged commitment to partner with and better fund cities and communities.
     
    "It's time to build stronger, more resilient communities (and) to invest in high quality, well-paying jobs," said Trudeau. "Fairness for Canada's cities and communities is possible. You know we need it. I don't have to sell you on that."
     
    On Thursday, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government is making strides on helping cities, such as with more funds for transit, but it's not enough.
     
    Robertson, the chair of the federation's big city mayors' caucus, said some of the nation's infrastructure is decades behind, imperilling Canada's ability to compete in the global marketplace.
     
    Trudeau said his plan focuses on affordable housing, transit and infrastructure, better technology, and helping cities adapt to extreme weather catastrophes caused by global warming.
     
    He also said he will help cities gather data by bringing back the long-form census.
     
    "Strategic investments can make a real difference," said Trudeau.
     
    "Canadians from all across the economic spectrum are finding affordable housing in short supply," said Trudeau, adding that affordable housing is an acute crisis point in Vancouver.
     
    "Metro Vancouver is on the brink of a massive labour crisis because, over the next 10 years, housing will become unaffordable for residents working in 85 out of 88 in-demand jobs."
     
     
    Asked later by reporters, Trudeau said a fully-costed platform to pay for the cities plan will be presented in the fall election.
     
    But Oliver reminded the mayors in his speech that Harper's government has broadly expanded investments in cities while keeping taxes low.
     
    Oliver said the average age of core infrastructure in 2000 was 18 years, but is now under 15 years. That's the lowest level since such data started being collected in 1961, he added.
     
    "We are already investing 10 times more today than we did in 2003, and a lot more is to come," said Oliver.
     
    Oliver urged the mayors to ask where Trudeau, and other leaders, will find the funds to pay for their promises.
     
    "Promises without a viable plan are hardly credible," said Oliver. "And a plan is not viable if it is billions of dollars in the red and rising."
     
    Federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May will speak to the mayors over the weekend.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

    TORONTO — Tim Hortons is getting a crash course in brand association as the company tries to extinguish the fracas over its decision to pull ads for pipeline giant Enbridge.

    Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable
    TORONTO — A police sergeant who choked a compliant man he arrested illegally at the G20 summit five years ago and then lied about it was handed a two-month demotion to constable Friday.

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster
    A 23-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder in the attack of an elderly woman while she was out for a walk in New Westminster, B.C.

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger
    RCMP are appealing to the occupants of a dark or black SUV who may have witnessed an erratic driver on the Sea-to-Sky Highway near Lillooet, B.C., before three people were killed in a crash.

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court
    Const. Bill Bentley was among four officers who confronted Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport in October 2007, when he was stunned with a Taser and died.

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute
    More than 30 shootings believed to be related to a clash between two drug gangs have rocked Surrey and Delta in recent months.

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute