Senators warn Liberals about need for plan on infrastructure spending
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.