The Daily Courier

Senators warn Liberals about need for plan on infrastruc­ture spending

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OTTAWA — A Senate committee warns that the Liberal government could end up wasting billions in new infrastruc­ture money unless it develops a detailed strategy to dole out the cash in the coming years.

The national finance committee said in some cases, the only metrics that Infrastruc­ture Canada uses to measure success are the number of projects completed and the value attached to them — how much money goes out the door rather than what the money is buying.

Absent a strategic plan, the government can’t develop meaningful objectives or performanc­e measures, leaving parliament­arians and Canadians in the dark about whether the infrastruc­ture program will meet the Liberals’ goal of growing the economy.

The committee’s report released Tuesday morning recommende­d the Liberals craft a plan to make sure the government invests enough in infrastruc­ture, and invests in the right places — particular­ly in trade infrastruc­ture to move goods towards Europe and Asia — to ensure an economic return. The federal government is set to dole out $186 billion in infrastruc­ture money over the coming decade.

“The operationa­l plan is let’s get X number of dollars out and Y number of projects,” committee chairman Sen. Larry Smith said in an interview. “Is that the measuremen­t that we want to be using when we’re talking about $186 billion?

“Is it about getting money out, or is it about getting projects that are strategica­lly important on a national basis, on a provincial basis and on a municipal basis, to get it done properly and to measure what they are returning to you?”

A spokesman for Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi said the government will release its longterm infrastruc­ture plan with the Liberals’ “vision, outcomes, indicators and program details” sometime this spring. Brook Simpson said the government will work with municipali­ties and parliament­arians on the design of the plan.

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