Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Your Worship, it's great to have you here today.
I also was a mayor, for eleven years, and a director of the Union of British Columbia Municipalities, so I understand some of the challenges municipalities have.
You mentioned there were three areas in which you felt Quebec was penalized with regard to the stimulus funding. One was the negotiations between Quebec and the Government of Canada. I know that British Columbia was the first to sign on, and we were the first out on the track, but Quebec wasn't that far behind. I don't think those negotiations were delayed any more than they were for some of the other provinces that have been successful in rolling out the stimulus money.
The other thing you mentioned was about municipal elections. As a former mayor, I can recall the transition from when I was first elected. I think the day after being sworn in I was signing a collective agreement with the union. There's a certain flow of responsibilities and decisions that go along even though there's a change in council.
I know that in the municipality I represented, we had a capital plan for roads and for upgrades of our infrastructure. Some of them were shelf-ready. There were various levels, but they were ready for funding, and we would hope we'd get some provincial or federal funding in the future.
I don't know if I, as a former mayor, particularly think the election disrupted that flow of decision-making and planning for infrastructure. The only thing I might buy a little bit is the weather, because I live in the California of Canada, and you get about two or three more weeks of winter here in the east. So I appreciate that.
One of the things our minister did as soon as he announced the stimulus funding was to tell all the members of Parliament to get out there and meet with their municipalities and sit down and find out what projects they had and how these moneys could apply. As a former mayor, the first thing I did was to have meetings with all seven of the communities and municipalities in my constituency. I told them to take the stuff off the shelves they had been hoping to do for a number of years, and it was really interesting, because we were able to get the money out right away. In fact, the chair and I were in the top five as far as MPs who were rolling money out went. So it can be done, but there's a process you have to follow to get it done.
As far as projects and timelines go, we were interrupted in British Columbia because we had a provincial election. There were no capital funding announcements for about two and a half months as we had the government re-elected. The fact is, the ministries changed, so we had a delay too. We had a rollout on May 12, but we didn't have another rollout until after August. There are those challenges, and that's part of the system we live in.
I believe that in government, as far as municipal government goes, you have those plans in place, and you're waiting for money. I think it was great that our government came out with the stimulus. Quite frankly, because this money was needed in the economy, we found that the major projects in my constituency came in at lower than was budgeted. One highway project that the Government of Canada funded to $12 million--it was a $25-million project--came in $3 million under budget. The second stage of that project came in at $1.5 million under budget. A sewage treatment facility was $1.5 million under budget. Because there was no investment by the private sector at that time, there was a capacity of engineers and contractors ready to go. We found we were able to get those projects up and going and get good prices on those projects.
I don't want to argue about the circumstances in Quebec compared to those in British Columbia, but I feel there is some responsibility upon the municipalities.
In most of the communities I had, there were projects on the shelf that they had reserved, set aside, so when the opportunity came up they could use those reserves to fund these projects. Is that not the system with the municipalities in Quebec, whereby they set aside reserves for future capital projects?