Thank you very much.
First of all, I'd like to thank the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates for choosing to study the opportunities, advantages, and the effectiveness of using public-private partnerships in the delivery of federal government services.
The City of Winnipeg has found PPP or P3 projects, as they are called, to be phenomenal tools. They are not the right fit for every project, but for major infrastructure renewal, they make good sense for municipalities that need to stretch their infrastructure dollars further.
Like most other Canadian municipalities, the City of Winnipeg is faced with a pressing need to maintain and replace its critical infrastructure. At current levels of funding, the City of Winnipeg's infrastructure deficit is projected to reach $7.4 billion by 2018. Many of our roads, bridges, water and sewer systems, and community facilities require major upgrades and repairs, as they were built more than 60 years ago.
When we look at how to fund these projects, however, we come up short. As you know, municipalities are heavily reliant upon federal and provincial funding. We have few options for raising revenue outside of property taxes, fees, and permits. As members of city council, our challenge is to keep the budget balanced, maintain essential services to citizens, and reinvest in crumbling infrastructure, all at the same time.
P3s have offered one solution, allowing us to replace critical infrastructure while making wise use of taxpayer dollars. In essence, P3s allow the public sector to focus on defining the output—which may be better traffic flow or upgrading facilities—while leaving it with the private sector to provide the most productive way to deliver these outputs. From the city's perspective, P3s have four major benefits.
One, P3 projects provide the City of Winnipeg with long-term budget certainty, as all costs are determined up front.
Two, P3 projects encourage contract discipline, since there is no benefit to the contractor from incurring cost increases.
Three, P3 projects provide maintenance guarantees. City-owned assets will be turned over to the City of Winnipeg in good condition 30 years after the project is completed.
Four, P3 projects encourage innovation. Contractors are motivated to complete the project in the most efficient and sustainable ways, as they have responsibility for the long-term maintenance.
City of Winnipeg taxpayers have benefited from the P3 approach on several projects. The Chief Peguis Trail extension project, for example, marked the first time a Canadian municipality received a PPP Canada grant, and positioned Winnipeg as a municipal leader in P3 projects. This project involved extending a four-lane divided roadway for nearly four kilometres.
Completed on budget and one full year ahead of schedule, the Chief Peguis Trail extension project provided Winnipeg residents with early access to a roadway that took through-traffic off residential streets and onto a major thoroughfare. The project also included the construction of landscaping, multi-use pathways to encourage walking and cycling, and noise walls and berms to reduce traffic noise. This was a $108 million project. The design-build-finance-maintain approach is expected to bring value-for-money savings of approximately $31 million compared to a traditional procurement. Remember, the City of Winnipeg will have no maintenance risk on this project for the next 30 years.
The Chief Peguis Trail extension was named the province's best managed project for 2012 by the Project Management Institute of Manitoba.
This year, the City of Winnipeg is seeing the same success with the Disraeli Freeway and Bridges project, the city's largest bridge project and a P3. This major roadway connects the northeast part of the city of Winnipeg with downtown. Approximately 42,000 people travel these roads and bridge structures every day. One of the project’s major successes involved keeping four lanes of traffic open during all peak travel times during construction.
This new infrastructure will have a life of 75 years. By choosing to develop the Disraeli project as a P3, the city has been able to protect taxpayers from cost overruns, update a critical piece of aging infrastructure, and ensure that a well-maintained asset is transferred back to the city in good condition after the 30-year term. An independent, value-for-money assessment of the Disraeli Freeway and Bridges project determined that the City of Winnipeg will save approximately $47.7 million as a result of the P3 approach.
So when is a P3 not appropriate?
They’re not the best choice when the municipality already has a good track record of delivering projects of similar size and scope. In essence, a P3 is like an insurance policy: a premium is paid and the risk is transferred. If the risk transferred is greater than the premium, this represents positive value for money.
As you likely have gathered, the City of Winnipeg brings in a third party to assess the value for money in order to ensure that a P3 is the right choice.
I hope I have demonstrated the value the P3 model offers the City of Winnipeg. Our citizens gain from new infrastructure and from the cost certainty that P3s provide. We should never forget that it’s our public infrastructure that keeps us safe as we travel from work and back again each day. Our infrastructure forms the very foundation of our cities.
Unfortunately, most Canadian municipalities are at a tipping point. As the Federation of Canadian Municipalities has recently stated, our choice is to invest in infrastructure or stand by as the repair bills increase along with the possibility of serious infrastructure failures.
I have no doubt that in 30 years, when the future Mayor of Winnipeg takes a tally of all the major infrastructure projects being turned back to the City of Winnipeg in top condition, he or she will say, “Thank goodness for P3s.” That's why, as Mayor of Winnipeg, I will continue to be vocal about the benefits of public-private partnerships.
Thank you for having me here today.