Feds pledge $3.3B for provinces, territories
OTTAWA • The federal government is moving ahead with plans to help provinces and territories shore up their defences against COVID-19 by freeing up billions of dollars to make schools and hospitals more pandemic resistant and expand outdoor public spaces.
Infrastructure Minister Catherine Mckenna unveiled details of the plan Wednesday, which followed weeks of talks between Ottawa and provincial and territorial governments — as well as years of criticism about the slow pace of the Liberals’ infrastructure spending.
More than $3.3 billion out of the $ 33 billion that the Liberal government has previously promised in matching funds for provincial and territorial projects will be available for projects related to the pandemic that are ready to move quickly.
The federal government is envisioning the money will be used to retrofit schools, hospitals and long- term care facilities to better limit the spread of the novel coronavirus, as well as to build more bike lanes and walking paths.
Provinces and territories will also be able to use the money to shore up their protections against other disasters such as floods and wildfires. Provincial projects need to be finished by 2021. The territories will have an extra year.
The maximum cost for any single project is $10 million.
To get things moving faster, Mckenna said Ottawa is streamlining the process for provinces and territories to submit projects for funding. It will cover 80 per cent of the cost of eligible projects submitted by provinces, and the full cost from the territories.
Normally, Ottawa would cover one-third of the cost of municipal projects, half the cost of provincial projects and 75 per cent of the cost in Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon.
The goal is “to help address the pandemic, to make communities more resilient, to work on keeping kids and aging parents and all of us safer and also to improve the quality of life,” Mckenna said during a news conference at the Boys and Girls Club of Ottawa.
“We will be speeding up project approvals. We will be opening up new projects eligible for funding. ... And recognizing the challenging financial situation for municipalities and provinces, we’ll be offering a bigger federal share.”
Many provincial and municipal governments are facing significant financial pressure due to the pandemic.
The federal government has promised billions of dollars in stimulus funding, though Mckenna acknowledged the infrastructure funds in question on Wednesday had been previously announced.
Ottawa will now have to sign agreements with the provinces and territories modifying the terms of the previous infrastructure- funding arrangements.