Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for coming in today on this particular topic.
What I've found on this topic is that I really haven't been able to comprehend why the government has so far been so difficult to deal with on it. To my mind, it seems clear there was a partnership entered into between municipalities and provinces and the federal government, with the federal government having a very large stake in seeing that the stimulus funding was conducted in a fashion that could work and that the projects identified were not regular business, that these projects would be in addition to municipal capital programs that were already agreed upon.
The federal government, in order to create stimulus--and knowing, as you're saying, that infrastructure programs actually work very well for stimulus and that the results would be very strong--went into this and put the burden on the municipalities to completely deliver these in a certain timeframe. Well, I haven't seen a good reason why the federal government has now decided that they can't be flexible...they're moving on this issue.
It's my concern that.... Just as the representative from the Saskatchewan association, Mr. Harvey, mentioned, there's some concern that we won't get the answer about the extension soon enough so that proper decision-making can take place. If we continue to delay this decision on the part of the federal government as to what is fair and what is proper about extending the deadline, we're going to run into extra costs for the municipalities on projects that they went into in good faith.
Do you see that as a particular issue here?