Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for this opportunity. I moved this motion regarding Mr. Page so that we could discuss his ability to review stimulus spending on infrastructure in Canada. I think it is very important that this committee, the only parliamentary committee that is accountable to the public for this type of spending, conduct a review, as one committee member already mentioned, several months after the launch of a program described by the government as the most sizeable infrastructure spending in Canadian history. I hope that we will be able to agree to invite the Parliamentary Budget Officer, Mr. Page, to appear before the committee given that the independent position was created by the government.
I believe it's quite important that this committee, the only committee with a mandate to oversee what the government calls its largest outlay of infrastructure spending, do so at a juncture now where the government has filed certain information, but where we have not had an independent review of whether or not the infrastructure program, at a cost this year in the order of $9 billion, is actually accomplishing its objectives. I think that the particular responsibility, almost a fiduciary responsibility, for this committee is unique.
Through the clerk, Mr. Chair, I'd like to table some documentation dans les deux langues, a report that I did in my capacity as critic, called “Breach of Trust on Jobs: The Status of Infrastructure Stimulus Spending in Canada”, Not that this would become a committee document, but simply for the benefit of the committee members, we culled 1,000 projects in the course of a couple of weeks to determine the status of infrastructure spending. Again, my point today, and the motion today, is about bringing in someone independent. I don't expect members opposite to agree that every finding we put forward is one they're happy with, but I do expect no one on this committee to shy away from the findings and the explanation and the requirements of the independent Parliamentary Budget Officer. To do less, frankly, is to say to Canadians out there that not only should we simply not have the oversight this committee has in terms of the dollars that have been voted, but that we don't have the sense of responsibility towards them to give them the assurance that this very large historic outlay for....
To be clear, all parties, I think, have agreed that there is a circumstance in the country that required a stimulus to take place. But I would suggest to you that on its face--and this is in support of the motion--there is at least a reason given in the report I've put up for circulation to have this kind of examination at this time.
There are two findings in that report. One is that only 12% of the funds have actually reached the stage of creating jobs, contrary to some published claims by the government. The second is that there are questions that can be raised, from the limited data we have available as members of the committee.... I assure you that we have asked the committee for both briefings and have been denied on several occasions now. We have filed Order Paper questions--and I'm happy to make those available to members of the committee--many of which were left with large gaps in terms of information. It is the responsibility of someone in government to have available full information about the status of these large outlays of funds. Again, I don't ask the members of the committee to accept the findings of the effort I put forward, but I would say to you that there are things there that should be concerning.
The second concern is that the dollars were allocated and targeted based not on economic need but rather on political considerations in at least several of the programs in several of the provinces and, in fact, in each of the programs and provinces that we have been able to obtain public numbers for.
I suspect that it's in the interest of the government, in particular, to clear the air and put forward its own version of things in detail. It's something that on at least two occasions, both the Prime Minister and the minister responsible for the conduct of the infrastructure program have said they would make available. I think it would be passing strange if it were not this committee, with the expertise of the people around the table and the engagement they had with the minister and other people early on in the discussion of the infrastructure program, that would express that interest.
Again, the motion is quite simple. It's that the Parliamentary Budget Officer come and tell us about his knowledge and analysis. I'm not asking him to entertain anything other than that. I think that is in keeping with the responsibility we have, given the size, the scope, and perhaps some of the questions that have been raised about the infrastructure program. I think it's simply good government--and some level of accountability--to have Mr. Page perform his duties in front of this committee with respect to this particular outlay.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Merci bien.