National Post

StatsCan launches roads census

Liberals have set infrastruc­ture spending goals

- Jordan Press

• A major effort is underway to collect the most detailed data yet on the state of the country’s roads, bridges, water pipes and transit systems.

Statistics Canada quietly launched a national survey late last month to get an unpreceden­ted level of granular detail on the state of infrastruc­ture at the provincial and municipal level.

Urban and rural municipali­ties will have until November to respond to the questionna­ire, and Statistics Canada officials say they expect to have the first results ready by next summer.

Collecting the informatio­n is imperative for the Liberal government’s economic agenda.

It wants to ensure that $186.7 billion in planned federal infrastruc­ture spending over the next 12 years targets large projects that drive growth regionally or nationally and not smaller, local projects with no widespread impact.

Statistics Canada plans to use the data from the survey, and expand the national informatio­n it currently collects about infrastruc­ture value and spending to determine the effects on the economy, productivi­ty and jobs and the government’s fiscal outlook.

The Liberals have set a series of goals for the spendi ng, i ncluding boosting economic growth, lowering greenhouse gas emissions, making it easier to get around in Canada’s busiest cities, and reducing homelessne­ss.

Pages of briefing notes and presentati­ons obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act lay out how these efforts have taken shape in the last year.

A briefing note for Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi for a Feb. 14 meeting says that achieving federal goals will depend on provinces, territorie­s and cities putting forward projects for funding that meet the stated goals. The meeting was with Michael Barber, the “deliverolo­gy” expert hired to help the Liberals on their promise for evidence- based policy making.

Cities, provinces and territorie­s own about 95 per cent of the public infrastruc­ture in Canada and account for about 90 per cent of all public infrastruc­ture spending in Canada. The Liberals have vowed to give as much flexibilit­y to cities and provinces in how they use federal funds, causing a point of friction between national interests and local demands.

“Infrastruc­ture is not an area of ‘shared’ jurisdicti­on like immigratio­n; in this case, the government can influence by using its convening power and by enforcing its authority through program requiremen­ts,” the briefing note says.

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