Toronto Star

Transit funding is ‘at risk’

If Ottawa doesn’t extend deadline, city could lose $121.5M it had been promised

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

The city says it could be forced to leave millions of dollars in federal infrastruc­ture funding unspent unless Ottawa agrees to extend the deadlines for using the money.

Last year, the Liberal government gave Toronto’s transporta­tion plans a huge boost by allocating the city $856 million from the first phase of its $3.4-billion public transit infrastruc­ture fund.

However, the funding came with strings attached — it can only be spent on projects scheduled to be complete by March 31, 2019, and a maximum of 40 per cent of the money can be spent in the final year of the program.

Council has identified 87 projects to spend the money on, the majority of which are for the TTC. They include subway track maintenanc­e, upgrades to TTC stations, design and constructi­on of rail yards, and the purchase of nearly 800 new buses. The money must be matched by municipal spending.

A report going to Mayor John Tory’s executive committee on Tuesday says not all of the projects will be able to meet the federal government’s requiremen­ts. City staff have identified about $121.5 million in federal money that is “currently at risk” for not being spent within the fund’s guidelines.

The report, which was authored by the city manager and the acting chief financial officer, also warns that 37 per cent of the funding is projected to be spent in the program’s final year, leaving just a 3-per-cent cushion to avoid breaching Ottawa’s 40-percent limit.

“As a result, there is limited contingenc­y for slippage in project delivery,” the report says.

Staff are recommendi­ng council ask Ottawa to extend the deadline for the fund by one year, to March 31, 2020, and to increase the portion of the program that can be spent in the final year to 70 per cent.

If the federal government doesn’t agree to “additional program flexibilit­y,” the city might have to remove some projects from the list, which would leave Toronto taxpayers on the hook for the entire cost of the work.

A spokespers­on for Mayor John Tory said while the city is spending the infrastruc­ture money “in an efficient and responsibl­e way,” ever since the program was announced “staff have warned that it would be difficult to roll out millions of dollars in projects in such a short timeframe.”

“We don’t want to leave any money on the table and we’re confident the federal government doesn’t want to either,” said Don Peat.

In an email, Brook Simpson, the press secretary to Minister of Infrastruc­ture and Communitie­s Amarjeet Sohi, didn’t slam the door on the possibilit­y of loosening the guidelines.

Simpson said the minister has the power to grant extensions on individual projects “where there is a demonstrat­ed need,” and noted other municipali­ties have also signalled they want a “program-wide extension.”

As a backup plan, the report says, the TTC is negotiatin­g with vendors to speed up the purchase of new buses.

That could cut the amount of funding that risks going unspent to $84.8 million.

Money from the public transit infrastruc­ture fund can only be spent on projects scheduled to be complete by March 31, 2019

 ?? MARCUS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR ?? If the city can’t get an extension on a funding deadline, it has a plan to speed up the purchase of new buses.
MARCUS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR If the city can’t get an extension on a funding deadline, it has a plan to speed up the purchase of new buses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada