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Ontario stakeholders praise budget amid some criticism

Don Wall
Ontario stakeholders praise budget amid some criticism
BARRIE.CA 鈥 Stakeholders praised the government鈥檚 commitment to water and wastewater projects in municipalities across the province in Budget 2024. Pictured, the City of Barrie is currently undertaking a long-term upgrade to its Wastewaster Treatment Facility.

Ontario construction stakeholders say they are strongly supportive of the Doug Ford government鈥檚 focus on infrastructure spending and boosts for the skilled trades in its latest budget, but from some quarters came concerns over the ballooning deficit and a continuing 鈥減iecemeal鈥 approach to housing. 聽

Minister of Finance Peter Bethlenfalvy pointedly focused on infrastructure spending, especially projects to enable more housing construction, in delivering March 26. To emphasize that focus, the budget document was titled Building a Better Ontario.

 

鈥楨xtremely pleased鈥

鈥淲e are extremely pleased with this budget,鈥 commented Patrick McManus, executive director of the .

鈥淭he minister of finance spent the majority of his presentation talking about what we are building, and needing to build, to both house and move people now and into the future. And the answer was water and wastewater infrastructure, roads, highways, bridges and transit lines.鈥

鈥淭he construction industry should be extremely pleased with the government鈥檚 2024-25 fiscal road map,鈥 added Ian Cunningham, president of the .聽鈥淭here鈥檚 lots in it for our industry including highways, interchanges, hospitals, schools, housing-enabling infrastructure and another $100 million to the Skills Development Fund Training Stream.鈥

The finance minister said the government will accelerate the government鈥檚 10-year, $190-billion Plan聽to聽Build capital spending program, and highlighted the pre-budget pledge to allocate $1.8 billion to housing-enabling infrastructure, including $1 billion for the new Municipal Housing Infrastructure Program and $625 million more for the聽.

Bethlenfalvy also unveiled a new $200聽million Community Sport and Recreation Infrastructure Fund.

Other stakeholders praising the infrastructure focus included the Residential and Civil Construction Alliance of Ontario (RCCAO), the Ontario General Contractors Association (OGCA), the Progressive Contractors Association of 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 (PCA), the Ontario Stone, Sand & Gravel Association, the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies-Ontario聽and the Ontario Building Trades.

“The plentiful employment opportunities that we are seeing in聽Ontario’s聽construction trades are in large measure the result of firm government commitments to build more housing, transit and energy infrastructure to support growth, especially amid challenges with the cost of living,” stated business manager Marc Arsenault.

 

鈥楾ighter fiscal conditions鈥

鈥淎s Ontario enters tighter fiscal conditions, it is encouraging that the government continues to invest in new infrastructure and skills training,鈥 added Karen Renkema, vice-president Ontario at

Both president Giovanni Cautillo and Richard Lyall, president of the (RESCON), suggested the budget was underwhelming, with Cautillo asserting the budget was more of a spring economic update 鈥渟ince the vast majority of the items鈥 had already been announced.

Cautillo highlighted a statement indicating the government was exploring opportunities to support other large-scale projects such as student housing. 聽While welcome, Cautillo said, the government should consult with industry to ensure those projects are not all large scale, to 鈥渟timulate a great many of the small to medium-sized general contractors that make up 70 per cent of the industry in Ontario.鈥

Lyall, meanwhile, called the budget 鈥減redictable鈥 and said the housing-enabling infrastructure spending was 鈥渧ery modest鈥 relative to the size of the industry. Lyall said in regard to housing policy, 鈥淲e’re waiting for the main course for our industry.

鈥淲e’re nowhere near where we need to be. In fact, we’re moving in the wrong direction, based on the numbers. That鈥檚 because the housing crisis is more than just a housing crisis, it’s a growth management planning crisis. We’re actually in deep trouble.鈥

 

鈥楶iecemeal鈥 housing policy

Lyall cited a half-dozen systemic problems preventing the province from reaching its housing goals, including high costs and fees, lack of co-operation with builders and the government鈥檚 鈥減iecemeal鈥 approach to policy.

He said he 聽expects the government to roll out major housing reforms in a month or two.

The optimistic projections for future homebuilding contained in the budget are misguided, he added. Many projects are stalled right now with framers sitting at home and basements not going in, because the numbers do not add up.

鈥淧rojects aren’t going ahead,鈥 said Lyall. 鈥淭he first-time homebuyer is dead.鈥

In addition to the boost to the Skills Development Fund Training Stream, the government plans to spend an additional $16.5聽million annually over the next three years through the Skilled聽Trades聽Strategy. CEO Ian Howcroft said the spending would 鈥渒eep the momentum going鈥 and also welcomed more support for the Ontario Youth Apprenticeship Program.

Cautillo said the training stream which involves government working with industry, 鈥渉as been one of the most successful programs of the Ontario government鈥o date, this fund has helped more than 500,000 workers land better jobs in the skilled trades.鈥

Cunningham, meanwhile, said, 鈥淭he headline has to be the deficit.鈥 聽

With the economy growing at a 鈥渟nail鈥檚 pace鈥 this year, he said, the finance minister is putting his faith in possible future interest rate cuts to turn the economy, and the government鈥檚 finances, around before the next general election, slotted for June 2026.

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