Medicine Hat News

Liberals bank on Toronto for infrastruc­ture

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OTTAWA The Trudeau government was on the defensive Monday over its plans to create a new infrastruc­ture financing body amid opposition accusation­s that the Liberals had given global investors too much power over the agency’s design.

The Liberals have consulted private investors for months about how to build the agency after a federal economic advisers, including some whose groups could benefit financiall­y from infrastruc­ture investment­s, recommende­d the government create a bank to build more roads, bridges and transit systems to fuel economic growth.

And late last year, the Liberals asked global investment giant BlackRock to bring together some of the world’s top private and institutio­nal investors and refine the government’s pitch for their money.

During question period on Monday, the opposition parties charged that the new agency would help well-connected investment bankers, pension-fund managers and their clients who are helping with the bank’s design pad their bottom lines.

“This is a blatant conflict,” interim Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose said. “The prime minister has turned to BlackRock for all kinds of advice setting up this bank. That’s like the three little pigs hiring the big, bad wolf to be their contractor.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government consulted private investors, the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties and local chambers of commerce about the design of the Liberals’ infrastruc­ture program, which includes the bank. He said the Liberals need the bank to help pay for all the country’s infrastruc­ture needs.

“Drawing in on different sources of capital, so that people can get to work and home on time, people can get their goods to markets, create good middle-class jobs, is a priority for us,” Trudeau said.

The proposed bank would take $35 billion in government funding to entice private investment in projects like public transit systems, highways and electrical grids that generate revenues through user fees or tolls. Approximat­ely $15 billion of that will be cash, with the remaining $20 billion in the form of repayable loans or equity stakes that the Liberals say won’t affect the government’s bottom line.

The Liberals predict they can leverage three or four times the federal investment in private dollars for projects in three key areas: trade corridors, green infrastruc­ture and public transit. Any project selected for the bank would have to generate revenue and be in the public interest.

The Liberals argue the federal money going to the bank is a fraction of the overall spending infrastruc­ture plan and that cities, provinces and territorie­s will have the option of using the bank.

The Liberals plan to spend $81.2 billion on their infrastruc­ture program over the next 11 years, including the money for the bank.

 ?? CP PHOTO ADRIEN VECZAN ?? Bank towers are shown from Bay Street in Toronto’s financial district. Toronto is getting itself a new resident this year: the headquarte­rs of the federal government’s new infrastruc­ture financing agency.
CP PHOTO ADRIEN VECZAN Bank towers are shown from Bay Street in Toronto’s financial district. Toronto is getting itself a new resident this year: the headquarte­rs of the federal government’s new infrastruc­ture financing agency.

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