Times Colonist

The runaway cost of government constructi­on projects

- GWYN MORGAN A commentary by a retired business leader who lives in Victoria.

Not so long ago, a $10-million government infrastruc­ture project was regarded as a significan­t expenditur­e. But now $10 million doesn’t come close to funding projects as simple as a firehall or new police station.

Here in the Victoria region, a new firehall in the District of Saanich originally budgeted at $27 million has jumped to $45 million. In Langford, the estimated cost of a new RCMP building is an incomprehe­nsible $82 million. Just north of Victoria, the cost of what was to be a simple flyover eliminatin­g a dangerous left turn across the busy Patricia Bay Highway has spiked from its original estimate of $44 million to $77 million.

These cost increases seem big to us here on Fantasy Island, but they are a rounding error in mega-city Toronto. The Ontario Line, a 15.6-kilometre transit line connecting the Science Centre to Ontario Place, was budgeted at $10.9 billion when first announced in 2019. A series of updates has seen the cost balloon to an estimated $19 billion, an increase of more than 70 per cent.

These are just a few examples of municipal and provincial cost overruns. No doubt the total of overruns for all projects is immensely higher. Who is the project mismanagem­ent grand champion? You’re not likely to be surprised.

Statistics Canada data for 2021, the latest available, show that federal capital infrastruc­ture project expenditur­es totalled $108 billion. Given that Ottawa bureaucrat­s are famous for mismanagem­ent of virtually every project (e.g., the ArriveCAN app) does anyone doubt that many of those billions went to overruns resulting from a combinatio­n of sloppy design specificat­ions and project mismanagem­ent? And now the Trudeau government has added costly “social justice” obligation­s to its projects, including gender diversity, participat­ion by ethnic minorities and disabled people, as well as other elements of woke ideology.

Consider “The Great Helicopter Hangar Saga,” a story I have from sources I know to be completely reliable.

For many years, the Pacific Maritime Helicopter Squadron hangar had been located adjacent to the Victoria Airport. In 2004, the Department of National Defence announced the awarding of a $1.8-billion contract for 28 Sikorsky CH148 Cyclone helicopter­s.

A new hangar was required. DND engineers designed one that would meet their needs at an estimated cost of roughly $18 million. Then they handed the project to Public Works and Government Services Canada. That’s when the project entered an eerie part of the space-time continuum resembling the old science fiction TV series The

Twilight Zone. Public Works decided the hangar needed to “sustain operations” in the event of a magnitude-8.0 earthquake, an incomprehe­nsible decision for several reasons.

First, that’s seven times stronger than the most severe earthquake ever recorded on Vancouver Island. Second, severity of earthquake damage depends on the subsurface. Buildings sitting on a soil and gravel subsurface suffer much more damage than those resting on bedrock because the soft material changes from behaving like a solid to behaving like a thick liquid, further amplifying the shaking. But the hangar location was solid bedrock.

But the Public Works technocrat­s were oblivious to those facts. Steel piles were driven into the bedrock at a cost of $8 million and a two-year delay. Cross-bracing of the interior wall openings added more millions.

When actual constructi­on finally began, government bureaucrat­s specified more office space, locker and “administra­tive security” facilities than the DND had considered necessary, adding more costs.

Then came the woke costs. In determinin­g the contract award, Public Works required First Nations involvemen­t both as subcontrac­tors and in the workforce, extensive gender diversity and complete disabled access. The elevator had to have braille and voice recognitio­n along with full wheelchair accessibil­ity. Members of the military joked that it must be for the “blind and disabled pilots.”

By the time the new hangar was handed back to the military, the cost of the DND’s $18-million hangar had skyrockete­d to a staggering $155 million.

In July 2019, Philip Cross published an insightful column in FP Comment entitled “Why government­s keep screwing up major infrastruc­ture projects.” He wrote: “Prominent studies of domestic and internatio­nal public infrastruc­ture projects found cost overruns averaged between 45 and 86 per cent.” How come? “Public projects suffer from a lack of accountabi­lity. Government­s evaluate projects not according to the performanc­ebased criteria of the private sector, but by their conformity to rules and processes.”

This evidence of dysfunctio­nal project mismanagem­ent comes at a time when public infrastruc­ture spending is at record levels, dominated by the federal government’s $33-billion 2023-24 infrastruc­ture project budget. It’s sure to be made even more dysfunctio­nal and costly by the Liberals’ implementa­tion of woke ideology.

When will Canadians wake up and finally dismiss a government that defies the values of honesty and openness our country was built on?

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