What we know--and probably everyone around this table knows--about infrastructure is that it's a never-ending job. You build it, you have to maintain it, you have to repair it, and someday you have to replace it. As a country, we're only starting--and only have just started in the last few years--to realize that governments need to start planning their investments in that way. For a very long time, the federal government's involvement in infrastructure was of a much shorter term than was required. The gas tax, introduced by a previous government and made permanent by this one, is your foundation, then, for ongoing investments.
Now it's time to bring cost-shared programs into that vision, put them on a long-term basis, and bring the three orders of government together to have a much fuller discussion about the types of investments that should be the priority for those cost-shared investments. Right now, we still labour in a system in which a municipality throws a bunch of applications to the government, and then the government looks at them and chooses something. We need a much more strategic approach to the way we select the projects that governments try to undertake together. We need to set some objectives and measure our progress.
A very good example is public transit. There have been substantial investments in public transit, but what sorts of reductions are we trying to make in terms of commute times? What are we trying to accomplish in terms of traffic gridlock? There are very few national goals tied to our infrastructure investments. This is the discussion that we feel needs to be had, and it's extremely important that discussions start now.
Here's the reason: three years from now, the cost-shared federal infrastructure programs that exist under the Building Canada fund will expire. We know there's not going to be a lot of new money. If we spend the next couple of years planning how we can learn the lessons of the projects we've just built and the programs we've just used, and designing the next generation of programs, then as we come out of the deficit, we'll be ready to start making those investments.
If we don't have that conversation now, we won't start planning those new programs until 2013 or 2014 or 2015; our experience with infrastructure programs is that it's a further three or four years before any money gets spent, because you have a year of building a budget commitment, a year of doing funding negotiations with provinces, and a year of choosing projects before you're finally into building things.
For us, starting that conversation around those long-term principles now is essential, because otherwise three or four years of tight budgets could turn into a decade of no investment and no plan for our infrastructure.