Montreal Gazette

Liberals shake up infrastruc­ture bank leaders

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The federal government is shaking up the people in the top spots at the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank, including saying goodbye to the chief executive and installing a new board chair.

Out is Pierre Lavallée, the first CEO of the infrastruc­ture financing agency that the Liberals created two years ago.

In as the new board chair is Michael Sabia, who was on an advisory group that recommende­d the creation the agency, and a former chief executive of the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec that is behind an electric-rail project in Montreal that the bank is backing.

In a statement, the Liberal says the changes “signal a new phase” for the financing agency and come at “critical time” to address the “health and economic consequenc­es” of COVID-19.

The Trudeau Liberals created the bank in late 2017 to use $35 billion in federal financing over a decade to help government­s at all levels partner with the private sector to build revenue-generating roads, highways, bridges and electricit­y and water systems.

About $15 billion of that is money the government doesn’t expect to get back.

The agency faced political opposition at its creation, and then criticism for the slow pace at which it was evaluating and signing deals.

In a statement, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said Sabia’s experience with infrastruc­ture would be “a critical asset as the bank accelerate­s its activities.”

Sabia becomes chair on April 15 to replace former RBC executive Janice Fukakusa, who signalled her interest in stepping down months ago.

The agency had told Finance Department officials last year that it had 25 projects on the verge of being announced by early 2020.

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