The Hamilton Spectator

Doubts about infrastruc­ture bank short-sighted, says Liberal MP

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — One of the architects of the Liberals’ proposed infrastruc­ture bank says opposition to the idea is short-sighted, stupid and irresponsi­ble.

Liberal MP Adam Vaughan, parliament­ary secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, says the whole idea of the bank is to make it possible for municipali­ties to leverage private sector cash to fund crucial projects that would otherwise be unaffordab­le.

And while he acknowledg­es there are some risks involved, he maintains they’re far outweighed by the cost of doing nothing.

“The cost of not fixing aging infrastruc­ture can be catastroph­ic and if you don’t factor that into the cost analysis you’re not being realistic,” Vaughan said in an interview.

For example, Vaughan pointed to the urgent need to spend about $1 billion to upgrade the levees around the Port of Vancouver to prevent flooding from extreme weather events brought on by climate change. Those levees were almost breached three years ago, he said, coming within inches of flooding the port and the nearby Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport.

“The cost of losing that port and that airport? Three-quarters of our exports come in and out of that piece of infrastruc­ture. If that isn’t fortified and rebuilt very quickly, climate change will have an economic impact on this country, the likes of which will be impossible to calculate,” he said.

“To put that at risk because you have a fear of the private sector being a partner is not only stupid, it’s bloody irresponsi­ble.”

Vaughan is a former Toronto city councillor who helped craft the housing and urban infrastruc­ture components in the Liberals’ election platform, where the infrastruc­ture bank was first promised.

The Trudeau government is planning to launch the bank next year, with $15 billion in direct federal investment­s and another $20 billion in repayable contributi­ons, loans and loan guarantees. It hopes to leverage up to $5 in private investment for every $1 in government funding.

But both the Conservati­ves and New Democrats have warned that private investors’ demand for a high rate of return on their investment­s will inevitably increase the cost of building or upgrading infrastruc­ture and result in road and bridge tolls and user fees.

Their objections intensifie­d after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s summit Monday with some of the most powerful institutio­nal investors in the world, representi­ng a combined capital pool worth $21 trillion. He also met with some of Canada’s largest investors, including insurance companies, the big banks and pension funds.

But Vaughan says the doubters should recognize that without a private sector partner, The Daniels Corporatio­n, the city of Toronto would never have been able to afford to revitalize Regent Park, a crime-ridden, dilapidate­d, inner-city, social housing ghetto.

The infrastruc­ture bank is intended to leverage private investment for projects “with a natural revenue stream that people are used to paying,” he added, like water systems and electricit­y grids.

“People are used to paying for their water bill. It doesn’t matter one whit whether they pay it to the local government or to a private company as long as when they turn on the tap they get water and it’s delivered to them cheaply.”

Vaughan said smaller municipali­ties don’t have the fiscal capacity to float bonds to attract private investment for major projects, particular­ly expensive water systems.

The bank will allow communitie­s with similar types of projects to bundle their asset bases together and, backed by the federal government, Vaughan said they’ll finally be able to attract the needed private investment.

“Suddenly, small municipali­ties have access to capital they didn’t have before and the clean water they need gets delivered and the jobs that go with it arrive in their communitie­s.”

“To be afraid of the private sector when you’re trying to fix this country’s infrastruc­ture is short-sighted”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Liberal MP Adam Vaughan says it’s short-sighted to oppose private sector partnershi­ps in major infrastruc­ture projects.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Liberal MP Adam Vaughan says it’s short-sighted to oppose private sector partnershi­ps in major infrastruc­ture projects.

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