Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Big City Mayors Push Trudeau For Looser Strings On Infrastructure Money

The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2016 11:28 AM
  • Big City Mayors Push Trudeau For Looser Strings On Infrastructure Money
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising to be flexible and fair with billions in new infrastructure money as mayors from the country's biggest cities press the Liberals for carte blanche on the new cash.
 
Trudeau says his government is putting a priority on getting both existing and additional infrastructure funds out the door quickly to create jobs and help the Canadian economy.
 
Trudeau and the mayors are billing their latest talks in Ottawa as building a new deal for cities.
 
Municipalities want to be able to spend the money on projects they prioritize and they want Ottawa to pick up more of the tab. In some cases, they also don't want certain provinces acting as a middleman.
 
The Liberals have promised to spend an additional $60 billion on infrastructure over the next decade, with $5.1 billion of the new money to be doled out this coming fiscal year.
 
The government also wants to move out almost $9 billion in existing infrastructure funds that haven't been allocated to any projects.

MORE National ARTICLES

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum
Former radio star Jian Ghomeshi faces maximum penalties that — if convicted — are dramatically different for the charges he faces.

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner
Cpl. Dan Moskaluk of the Northern Rockies RCMP says in a news release that the chase began Tuesday morning when employees at a Husky bulk fuel plant along Highway 97 reported seeing Harley John Lay, 29.

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates
The first year Clint James worked as a teacher in northern Ontario, a student asked him in October whether he was coming back after Christmas.

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates

Death Of A Dream: Abandoned Nova Scotia Resort Razed After Sitting Empty For Decades

Death Of A Dream: Abandoned Nova Scotia Resort Razed After Sitting Empty For Decades
HALIFAX — It was meant to be a beacon of luxury amid the charming fishing villages that dot Nova Scotia's pristine South Shore.

Death Of A Dream: Abandoned Nova Scotia Resort Razed After Sitting Empty For Decades

A Peaceful World Needs More Canada As 'Honest Broker': Ex-UN Refugee Chief

A Peaceful World Needs More Canada As 'Honest Broker': Ex-UN Refugee Chief
Antonio Guterres said Canada is now perceived as an honest broker and can play a leading role in bringing together warring factions to negotiate peace.

A Peaceful World Needs More Canada As 'Honest Broker': Ex-UN Refugee Chief

Prime Minister Says He's 'deeply Moved' By Courage In La Loche After Shootings

Prime Minister Says He's 'deeply Moved' By Courage In La Loche After Shootings
Trudeau is visiting the isolated Dene community of La Loche, which was rocked to its core last Friday when two brothers were killed in a home before a teacher and an aide were shot at the high school.

Prime Minister Says He's 'deeply Moved' By Courage In La Loche After Shootings