Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister had promised to make public all the details regarding the negotiation of a privatization agreement concerning Pearson Airport as well as the agreement itself.
Instead, we have a study done by a former Ontario Liberal minister, behind closed doors, that explains that political personnel and lobbyists had a role to play, a role out of the ordinary, in the negotiation of this agreement. We have few details and nobody is being blamed. We must shed more light on this, and only a public inquiry can do it.
Till we know the role of the various players, that is to say governments, officials, political personnel, lobbyists and investors in these negotiations, and till we know who exercised pressure to have this deal signed come what may, even during the election campaign, we will not be able to determine whether investors are really victims that should be compensated, or players who managed to get a hasty signature, and therefore should not get anything from the public purse.
Since the government wants to appear open and show us that it functions in a transparent way, it should allow the royal commission of inquiry we have been asking for since the very beginning of this affair. We must shed light on a case which just might be one of the biggest patronage affairs in the history of Canada.
I should point out that in the first few days of this government- I was hearing this morning comments sometimes odious, often uncalled for -the Minister of Transport was not against such an inquiry on the Pearson deal. Several Liberal members of the Toronto caucus were definitely in favour. However, they soon realized that friends of their party were also involved, not just friends of the Conservative Party, so the government and the minister backed down and went for a report prepared behind closed doors: the Nixon report.
There is no doubt, when you look at the people involved, that there were many lobbyists very close to the previous Conservative government. Let me name just a few. There was Pat MacAdam, a Conservative lobbyist and college friend of Brian Mulroney. There was Bill Fox, a Conservative lobbyist who is a former press secretary and personal friend of Brian Mulroney. There was Harry Near, a Conservative lobbyist and a long time party activist. There was Don Matthews, former chairman of Brian Mulroney's nomination campaign in 1983, and also former chairman of the Conservative Party and of the party's fund-raising campaign. There was Hugh Riopel, a lobbyist who was an important member of Mr. Mulroney's staff. There was John Llegate, a close friend of Michael Wilson. There was also Fred Doucet, who has always been related to the Conservative Party in one way or another.
However, there were also Liberals, which probably explains certain things. This is probably why, in spite of all the promises made regarding an eventual royal commission of inquiry to find out the details regarding the privatization of Pearson Airport, such an exercise was not conducted with all the necessary transparency.
For example, the people involved included senator Leo Kolber, who made the headlines during the election campaign, when he organized for the current Prime Minister a very private dinner meeting, a simple affair where the cover charge was a mere $1,000. Senator Kolber invited well-known personalities such as Charles Bronfman, who also happened to be involved in the Pearson dealings.
Also present was Herb Metcalfe, a lobbyist with the Capital Hill group, as well as an official for Claridge Properties and a former organizer for the current Prime Minister. There were others and there will be others such as Ramsay Whitters, a Liberal lobbyist closely related to the Prime Minister. There were all kinds of people.
So, when I look at all this, I can understand that the Liberal Party of Canada did not want to embarrass its friends who probably indirectly contribute, through their interests in Canadian ventures, to the party financing, and this is probably why the government did not want to shed light on this episode.
The members opposite are upset because we name their friends and point out the major reason why such an indecent bill was tabled today by a government willing to let its friends off the hook, in spite of their involvement in the privatization of Pearson Airport.
The public has the right to know all the details surrounding this decision, and this is why the Bloc Quebecois demands a public and independent inquiry which will shed light on these dealings. The situation is so serious in fact that the Minister of Transport himself stated that the federal government was considering setting up a royal commission of inquiry. The minister made that statement on November 29, 1993. It is true that new appointees are always full of good intentions when they take over a department. I suspect the minister was quickly called to order by his party's establishment.
We must not only mention the involvement of friends of the Liberal Party of Canada. There is also a whole series of strange, bizarre and even indecent things which have occurred from a financial point of view regarding the transaction as such, and these things must be pointed out. I will just name a few. We have examined the contract in its entirety and that is why it would be interesting to have a royal commission go over these incongruities together.
First, the term of the contract. The term would be divided in two: a 37-year term, with the possibility to renew for another 20 years. What for? Why did the federal government accept to do this for the Pearson Airport investors at the time? To avoid paying an Ontario transfer tax whereby you have to pay some $10 million in taxes on leases with terms over 50 years.
So, with the help of the federal government, the investors were able through that clause to circumvent the Ontario tax. Have you ever heard of a federal government conniving in defrauding provincial tax?
Second incongruity: the way the rent is to be calculated. It says in the contract that it can be calculated one of two ways. I will mention just one about which there are no less than ten oddities, ten seldom if ever used clauses in this kind of contract, especially for multimillion dollar transactions like the privatization of the Pearson Airport. The contract provides that PDC, Pearson Development Corporation, must pay 30.5 per cent of its previous year gross income to the government, up to a maximum of $125 million of gross income. On any amount exceeding $125 million in gross income, PDC would have to pay to the government 45.5 per cent of its gross income in rent.
Normally, gross income includes all income generated by the operation of air terminals but, in the case of the Pearson Airport, it excludes no less than 10 deductions considered as unusual in this kind of contract. The first one relates to taxes paid by consumers, passengers and occupants which are collected by Pearson Development Corporation on behalf of the government. Second, certain unusual items do not go into the calculation of the gross income, which is unusual. If you deduct these unusual items when calculating gross income, of course this will reduce the rent to be paid.
So unusual earnings were intentionally removed from the contract so that the Pearson lease could be reduced over the 57 years. The third incongruity in this financial deal is that other types of income provided for, while not extraordinary, are not usual and do not originate from regular terminal operations, including the sale of assets. In other words, again, gross leasing costs are reduced by exempting these unusual types of income.
There were other inconguities in the provisions on investment income. I will not go into detail on this as there are actuarial tables available, but I will say that this type of investment income provision is unusual in this kind of transaction. I could mention the discounts and refunds granted by PDC to airport tenants. I could talk about the money recovered and spent by the government to occupy parts of the airport, where inconsistencies and things that are unusual in this kind of deal were noted everywhere.
We could also talk about the amounts collected by PDC on behalf of the government or any other party, which is a rather unusual clause in this type of contract. I would also like to point out another clause whereby the federal government covered Pearson's debts although it was not involved in operations in any way. In other words, it covered bad debts although it was no longer involved in airport management. It is a disgrace, Mr. Speaker.
I could also talk about the $70 million paid to Air Canada to convince it to support privatization. Imagine, convincing Air Canada to support a privatization project as inappropriate and unusual as the Pearson airport deal.
We could also mention the severance allowance for employees of Transport Canada. The Government of Canada had offered severance allowances to 160 of its employees, although their jobs with Pearson Development Corporation were guaranteed for two years, under conditions similar to those in their current jobs. This severance allowance was supposed to cost Canadian taxpayers the trifling sum of $5.5 million.
It is also appalling to see, especially in a transaction of this nature, the total lack of any financial analysis, of any sound and independent projections of the main parties' revenues, and I am referring to the two investment corporations which later
merged, and also the lack of any analysis of these investors' status. When we look at Paxport and the other party to this transaction, it is clear that all was not rosy. The financial situation of Paxport was appalling.
So we could talk about all kinds of anomalies, and we could go on for ever, because when you look at the fine print, there are always questions that arise regarding this deal.
So by going ahead with the bill before the House this morning and by refusing to conduct a public inquiry into this matter, the government has lost its credibility, a government that during the election campaign claimed that it was going to restore the confidence of citizens in government by opting for transparency and integrity. I think they are off to a very bad start.
I think it is time Liberal members opposite, who look rather depressed by the course of events, decided to wake up. It is time they did, because my colleagues and I have the impression they are being manipulated by the establishment of their party and by their minister who comes to caucus meetings with instructions to vote for this and support that and do the other. They are mainly being manipulated by the leaders of the Liberal Party establishment.
I beg them to wake up, because the public is starting to wake up. It is fed up with patronage and money going to the friends of the party, fed up with the lack of policies for public funding, fed up with the lack of transparency and integrity-in other words, fed up with people who for years criticized the previous government's lack of integrity in condemning a deal which they practically endorsed, because friends of the Liberal Party of Canada are involved, and they are directly involved.
For all these reasons, I will vote against Bill C-22, and on behalf of my colleagues, and the Leader of the Opposition made the same request this morning, I ask that a royal commission of inquiry be appointed to investigate this matter.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and I hope my colleagues opposite wake up some day, because their behaviour today is irresponsible.