STAY CONNECTED: Have the stories that matter most delivered every night to your email inbox. Subscribe to our daily local news wrap.

Opposition to private investment in infrastructure stupid, irresponsible: Liberal MP

Nov 17, 2016 | 12:30 AM

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.

“The idea of losing southern Vancouver and southern B.C. to a levee that was built in the 40s for weather conditions that have changed radically in the last 50 years — 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’s characterization of opposition to the infrastructure bank infuriated New Democrats, who demanded that the government denounce his “disrespectful” statements.

“Canadians who are concerned about tolls and user fees, he’s calling them stupid,” NDP MP Rachel Blaney told the House of Commons on Thursday. “Canadians who understand that private investors will only invest if they see a return, he’s calling them stupid.”

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 other 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.

Vaughan said 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, once a dilapidated, crime-ridden social housing ghetto that’s been transformed into a mixed housing development.

The project required “a private sector partner, public sector assets and public borrowing to co-ordinate and create the plan that delivers new housing for people,” Vaughan said.

The project demonstrates that private sector involvement in infrastructure doesn’t have to result in new user fees to ensure a high rate of return on investment, he said. In the case of Regent Park, “People pay a user fee. It’s called rent.”

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.”

The city of Toronto had a big enough asset base to borrow the money necessary to get the Regent Park project off the ground. But Vaughan said smaller municipalities don’t have the fiscal capacity to do that or big enough projects to attract the interest of private investors.

The bank will allow communities to bundle similar types of projects and their combined asset bases together so that, with the backing of the federal government, they’ll finally be able to attract the private investment needed to for things like upgrading their water systems, Vaughan said.

Even big cities like Toronto stand to benefit, according to Vaughan. He said Toronto is losing a social housing unit every day to disrepair because it doesn’t have the financial borrowing capacity anymore to bring more public-private partnerships like Regent Park on line.

NDP finance critic Guy Caron accused Vaughan of taking “a very urban way of looking at things.” He predicted that Regent Park-type projects won’t happen in small towns, dismissing the idea of bundling projects as “much more complicated.”

And while some projects may have natural revenue streams that will give private investors a high return, Caron said that’s not true for roads and bridges.

“You have to have tolls,” he said in an interview.

But Vaughan argued that every dollar leveraged out of the private sector is a dollar freed up for the vast majority of projects that will be funded 100 per cent from the public purse under the federal government’s plan to sink $186 billion over the next 12 years into infrastructure.

“To be afraid of the private sector when you’re trying to fix this country’s infrastructure is shortsighted,” he said.

“Are there risks? Yeah. There’s a much bigger risk not building infrastructure.”

Joan Bryden , The Canadian Press

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version misspelled the term ‘levee.’