Ottawa Citizen

Liberals poised to funnel $30 million to city coffers

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA • Newly released documents show the Liberal government is expecting to send some $30 million in unused infrastruc­ture money directly to cities through a temporary top-up to the gas tax fund.

The party has long promised to shift unused infrastruc­ture money to the fund, which allows cities to spend on roads, highways, transit, water and sewer systems without having to apply for federal funding.

The $30-million sum is the bulk of what’s left of $837 million from four separate programs, set up under previous government­s, that had yet to be spent when the Liberals took office in November 2015. The Liberals gave the provinces and territorie­s until last March to allocate as much of the leftover money as possible to new projects.

Cities and provinces have long argued the money was difficult to access because previous government­s had put various restrictio­ns on how it could be spent.

More than $800 million of what was left over had been allocated; one document tabled in Parliament this week showed that just prior to the March deadline, there was less than $32 million still left.

“That money (the $837 million) we could have delivered through the gas tax fund,” Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi said Wednesday on his way into a caucus meeting. “The vast majority of those dollars are now allocated to new projects and only a few million will be delivered to municipali­ties through the gas tax fund.”

The documents tabled in Parliament this week show the government now expects to send about $30.3 million through the gas tax fund at the end of March, with Ontario receiving the biggest top-up at $13.7 million, followed by Quebec at $5.8 million.

Since taking office, Sohi has approved more than 1,200 projects. Constructi­on is underway on about 60 per cent, he said.

The problem for the Liberals is that infrastruc­ture money doesn’t flow quickly. It only leaves the federal treasury once project proponents submit receipts for reimbursem­ent, often leaving a lag between when work takes place and when infrastruc­ture money is actually spent.

Projects in Quebec, for instance, don’t typically seek reimbursem­ent until the project is completed, meaning that money is often not spent in the year that the federal government projects.

Earlier this month, the parliament­ary budget office said Ottawa’s planned infrastruc­ture investment­s did not materializ­e in the first half of the year and there’s a growing risk the spending will have to be pushed into 2017-18. That could have an effect on the economy and delay growth the Liberals predicted to see this year from their infrastruc­ture program.

The parliament­ary budget office is set to release a report Thursday that will provide more details of the new infrastruc­ture program.

The spending watchdog report plans to follow the flow of funds to approved projects, and what has been spent on the projects under the purview of multiple federal department­s and agencies.

 ??  ?? Amarjeet Sohi
Amarjeet Sohi

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