Penticton Herald

Prime Minister says cities are ‘essential partners’ to Canada

Trudeau, however, stops short of granting wishes during Halifax speech

- By KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau touted co-operation in a speech before Canada’s municipal leaders in Halifax on Friday, although he offered nothing new to address their concerns.

The country’s big city mayors have made a wish list that includes funding for affordable housing, climate change and new revenue tools ahead of next year’s federal election.

But instead of offering specifics in those areas, Trudeau stuck to broad themes, telling delegates at the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties annual conference that they are “essential partners” in shaping Canada.

“The federal and provincial government­s not only need to have a good understand­ing what’s happening on the ground in our cities and towns, we also need to be willing and ready to help implement solutions,” he said.

He said his government doesn’t believe in an “Ottawa-knows-best approach,” and respects local leadership.

To that end, Trudeau said his government has made significan­t financial commitment­s in areas important to municipali­ties, including infrastruc­ture and child care.

He also pointed to its $231-million commitment in tackling the opioid crisis, saying the money would “remove barriers to life-saving treatment and strengthen our borders.”

“At the core of these examples lies a common rationale: strong, resilient communitie­s are the heart and soul of this country,” he said. “And in order to keep it that way, we need to invest our time and effort into growing and bettering the places that people call home.”

Trudeau also mentioned the $40-billion National Housing Strategy announced last November, calling it “a blueprint for the future of Canadian housing.”

He said consultati­ons have also been ongoing with various levels of government on addressing gaps in the current homelessne­ss strategy.

As a result, he said Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada will release the federal government’s new plan “very soon.”

“By listening to people with lived experience and taking a data-driven approach, we’re confident that, in the next decade, we can reduce chronic homelessne­ss in this country by a full 50%,” Trudeau said.

The prime minister was briefly interrupte­d by protester Robin Tress, who blew a whistle and carried a sign that read “Blowing the whistle on Kinder Morgan.”

Tress, of the Council of Canadians, was quickly escorted away, but Trudeau made note of her interrupti­on.

“It’s the people of Canada who we work for and it’s the people of Canada who we serve,” he told delegates. “I know you take that responsibi­lity seriously as do I, and whether we agree or not we are going to keep talking and we are going to keep listening.”

In an interview following the speech, Tress said she felt compelled to take her message to Trudeau on the Liberal government’s $4.5 billion plan to buy Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline.

“There are many ways to participat­e in our democracy and one of them is by protesting unwise decisions made by our government­s,” said Tress. “People have been telling him for years that they don’t want this pipeline ... and he hasn’t been listening.”

Andrew Scheer, the leader of the Conservati­ve Party, also delivered some criticism of the Liberal government in a speech before the delegates.

He told the municipal politician­s they hadn’t seen solid results so far from the infrastruc­ture projects the Trudeau government had promised in the last election campaign.

“They said they would inject tens of billions of dollars into new infrastruc­ture projects and that was the justificat­ion for going into deficit,” he told the delegates.

“Where are we today? The deficits are much, much bigger than they said they would be ... but they haven’t produced meaningful results.”

Scheer also said his government would emphasize local decision-making, rather than keeping infrastruc­ture spending closely under the control of federal bureaucrat­s.

He cited Ottawa’s handling of disaster relief in his riding of Regina-Qu’Appelle.

Scheer said municipal authoritie­s asked for flexibilit­y on where to rebuild part of the town’s water system after flooding, but federal officials said it had to be rebuilt where it was.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A protester, carrying a sign and blowing a whistle, disrupts Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s speech at the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties’ conference in Halifax on Friday.
The Canadian Press A protester, carrying a sign and blowing a whistle, disrupts Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s speech at the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties’ conference in Halifax on Friday.

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