SOUND OFF: Taxpayers footing the bill for Horgan’s Community Benefits Agreements
THE PRESSURE IS MOUNTING on John Horgan and the NDP to scrap their Community Benefits Agreement (CBA) framework as more transportation projects continue to go wildly over budget.
The true cost of Horgan’s union benefits deal is becoming apparent as multiple delayed projects grapple with cost overrides. First, the Illecillewaet River highway widening project was first announced in 2015 budgeted to cost $35 million. Now, years later, and after receiving only five bids, government announced a cost overrun of a staggering 143 per cent higher than the initial budget in 2015.
We also recently learned of the significant cost overruns of the already much-delayed Kicking Horse Canyon stretch of Highway 1. British Columbian taxpayers are now on the hook for $150 million more than when the BC Liberals originally announced the project in 2017.
These projects have made increasingly clear the significant costs taxpayers are being burdened with to fund Horgan’s CBA scheme. It’s unfortunate to see the government forfeiting what is the best deal for British Columbians, and instead, paying back Horgan’s friends in the building trades unions who have donated millions to the NDP.