crs1026
Superstar
This is very worthwhile discussion, something not really being talked about in the election. At the beginning of today's string, I wondered if people were using the term "P3" (PPP) differently than the understood Western model.
If I were a right-wing candidate wanting to take Wynne down a few notches, I would be all over this. The argument doesn't have to have absolute merit, but it would be so easy to say "Wynne is doing the same thing she did with Hydro bills". As well as "feeding money to big rich contractors without proper oversight".
The reason Douggie isn't biting is - I doubt he or his staff understand any of this. But then, neither does the electorate he is pitching to. It's so easy to make it all sound good - "we are giving all this to the private sector, because they know better and they are more disciplined with money". Which is absurd when you know the inside workings of big contracts, but it sells to the electorate. Personally, I think ML's P3 strategy is as far reaching, and as potentially risky, as the Green Energy Act was... but I'm a transit nerd. I couldn't generate much interest in the topic around the family Easter dinner table, even after several bottles of wine, when the political discussion really got going.
To use P3 or not? It really comes down to building what otherwise wouldn't get built. The question isn't 'if' but 'how'. P3 has built massive amounts of infrastructure in our closest cousins nations, Australia and the UK. And drastic mistakes have been made, mostly in the UK, but also stunning models of success and management, and valuable return to the taxpayer per investment.
It's a bit like questioning using mortgages to buy a home. Good idea or not? Considering that in 99% of cases (my estimate), mortgages are used, even by many who could outright afford to buy cash up front, the detail is in how, not if.
Well, there's the difference. Your mortgage analogy makes sense when we talk about building the infrastructure. The concept of borrowing to buy an asset that generates value is well understood. The strategy doesn't make as much sense in terms of operational cost and managerial control. Borrowing to cover expenses is different than borrowing to invest.
P3 happens all over, so I'm not arguing it lacks merit. I'm concerned with just how much decisionmaking power ML is contracting out. And, I'm very leery that the first winter when the switches start freezing, and ML deflects the blame by saying "It's the contractor's responsibility, and they are losing the performance component of their payment", we will feel we are well served - any more than we like knowing that Bombardier is paying a penalty for being late with TTC trams. We taxpayers want to know whose desk the buck stops at, so we can demand that somebody get sacked. And insist it should never have happened. The ML P3 structure is firewalled too well for that to happen.
- Paul