37-1
37th Parliament,
1st Session
(January 29, 2001 - September 16, 2002)
Select a different session
Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
National Finance
Issue 17 - Evidence
| OTTAWA, Tuesday, September 18, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance met this
day at 9:30 a.m. to examine the role of government in the
financing of deferred maintenance costs in Canada's post-secondary institutions.
|
| Senator Lowell Murray (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Welcome back, colleagues, to our first
meeting of the autumn of 2001. We have quite a heavy workload
ahead of us in the coming months. I expect the committee will be
meeting twice a week every week between now and the
Christmas recess. That is just to deal with the two orders of
reference that have been sent to us by the Senate, the first of
which is the question of financing of deferred maintenance costs
at Canadian post-secondary institutions. The second inquiry,
which we will begin next month, is on the federal equalization
program.
|
| Today we begin our study of the role of government, not the
federal government alone, but the role of government in the
financing of deferred maintenance costs in Canada's post-second
ary institutions. You will know that our friend, Senator Moore,
from Nova Scotia, brought this issue to our attention last year. He
precipitated a debate in the Senate in which a number of
colleagues took part, and this was followed by an order of
reference adopted by the Senate in June. We are required as a
committee to report to the Senate on this matter by October 31,
2001. The committee's study is based to a large extent on a report
entitled, "A Point of No Return: The Urgent Need for
Infrastructure Renewal at Canadian Universities." This was
prepared by the Canadian Association of University Business
Officers, and you will recall that they went so far as to suggest
that there is $3.6 billion in maintenance costs which have been
deferred for one reason or another at our post-secondary
institutions.
|
| You have received this report, other briefing notes and copies
of speeches made by senators in the debate. All this was sent to
you during the summer months.
|
| Today we have two sets of witnesses. The first witness is from
the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of
Canada, Dr. Thomas Brzustowski, who, a little later this morning,
plans on catching an airplane to Sackville, New Brunswick, to
speak at Mount Allison University. We wish him well on that, and
we will do our best to accommodate him by not keeping him
more than 30 to 45 minutes.
|
| I understand you have a brief statement.
|
| Dr. Thomas A. Brzustowski, President, Natural Sciences
and Engineering Research Council of Canada: Mr. Chairman.
I look forward to helping in some small way with the committee's
mandate. I come to your deliberations from the perspective of the
federal funding of research, and I will arrive at the description of
a pressure on the universities that results, among other things, in
deferred maintenance.
|
| If you will allow me, I would simply like to move to the
diagram in the handout. I will leave it to members to read the text.
I would like to deal with this diagram because, if it looks
complex, it is. It reflects reality. An element of the funding of
research in Canadian universities does exert a pressure on the
universities that results in deferred maintenance. There is no
denying that. We have broken out in this diagram the various
kinds of expenses university research faces and who pays for
them.
|
| If we begin quite near the top of the diagram, I have arranged
the expenditures so that the costs of people involved in doing
research in the universities are more or less on the left, and the
tools are more or less on the right.
|
| My own agency, the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada, invests in people, discoveries and
innovation, so I will direct your attention to this part of the
diagram with the three arrows pointing from it.
|
| [Translation]
|
| The direct costs of doing the research is paid from NSERC
grants.
|
| [English]
|
| We pay for the direct costs of research, that is, the costs that
can be traced directly to every research project, and the costs of
expendable supplies. These are on the right-hand side under
"Operating costs": instruments and the tools, maintenance of the
tools, computing, telecommunications, travel and logistics, publication costs, things of that sort. We also pay for the cost of
research staff. These might be research associates and dedicated
technicians. Their salaries and benefits would be paid for by
NSERC.
|
| Finally in this area, I think many would agree, perhaps most
importantly, we pay in two ways for the young people, the
students who receive an education in the context of research.
There are people who apply, are nominated by their universities,
and there are direct competitions, personal competitions, for
scholarships and fellowships. Then there are those who are
appointed by the professors who are the principal investigators,
les chercheurs principaux, as their research assistants, and they are
therefore paid out of the money that is transferred through our
grants.
|
| That is not all we pay for, however. If you move even further to
the left, under "Principal Investigators," you will see three
numbers, roughly 9,000 professors, whose research we support in
universities from coast to coast. That number is growing, and you
will see on the front page of the statement why and how. We do
not pay any of their salaries except for 160 to 170 people who
hold what we call the "industrial research chairs" of NSERC in
which the salary is paid for a five-year period.
|
| You will see there that the Canada Research Chairs, a new
program started several years ago, will be supporting about 900
people, as professors in science and engineering, out of a total of
2,000.
|
| Most of the researchers in our universities - that is, the
professors who conduct research, supervise graduate students and
use their research knowledge to keep their undergraduate courses
alive - do not have their salaries paid by NSERC. They depend
for their salaries on the operating budgets of the universities,
which derive from provincial grants and tuition fees paid by
students.
|
| That deals with the left side of the diagram.
|
| Under "Tools," we have something new and something very
important in this country, namely, the large research infrastructure.
|
| [Translation]
|
| These are dedicated facilities and big equipment.
|
| [English]
|
| These are the dedicated facilities and the big equipment that the
Canada Foundation for Innovation helps fund. CFI pays 40 per
cent of the capital costs; universities must find the other 60 per
cent. Except for a recent injection of some money into the CFI
budget for operating some of this equipment that was installed
after a particular date, the universities must operate what CFI puts
in on their own.
|
| We have a small program, also described in the handout, called
"Major Facilities Access" which provides access to some of these
large facilities, but it is quite insubstantial by comparison. We are
talking here about an operating cost that conservatively might be
estimated at 10 per cent per year of the capital costs and one that
does not include amortization. We are talking about billions of
dollars worth of research infrastructure that CFI will put in.
Universities are coming to realize that they have a real challenge
in funding the operating costs.
|
| My last point comes closest to the committee's mandate,
namely, that the university facilities and services that are acquired
in order to be in the business of doing research are not paid by
anyone explicitly. The universities are on their own in funding
these so-called "indirect costs," which are quite substantial. They
are the costs for the library, for providing service laboratories, and
for having animal facilities that must meet standards mandated
through the Canadian Council on Animal Care, as well as the
costs involved for the computer network, electronics, and other
shops. This is hugely important. On a visit to St. FX last year, we
discovered that in some cases, because there was no electronics
technician on the campus or in the department who could help,
when general pieces of equipment needed service maintenance, it
either required a technician to be brought in from Halifax at close
to $1,000 a day, or the equipment had to be shipped to another
city if there was no distributor in Halifax and no service available
there. Quite apart from finding the money, the equipment was not
available to them for a month at least, and this did not involve
specialized equipment. This is the sort of issue that is very
difficult to manage if one does not have the budgetary capacity to
provide for some of these indirect costs in-house, that is, the
service technicians and the workshops. In addition, you must have
insurance, accounting and legal capacities. Research administration must meet the requirements for accountability in the use of
these public funds that the Government of Canada imposes
through agencies such as ours. Also, there must be an ethics
review when the research involves human subjects and environ
mental assessments under the Environmental Assessment Act
when that is required. Reports must follow the practices in the
authorization of expenditure and records must be available for
spot checks. All of that costs money. These are the indirect costs.
|
| I have to resort to second-hand statements here. This is the area
that universities tell us exerts such a pressure on them, among
other areas, that one of their responses is to defer maintenance on
physical plant. If the building can be used safely it will be used,
but it will not be brought up to the standards, perhaps, that are
needed. It will not be maintained well enough.
|
| This is a complex picture. One thinks that the federal
government is funding research through the agencies. Yes, it is,
but it is not funding it alone. The provinces are partners through
the operating grants to the universities, and sometimes even more
directly in the funding of infrastructure in partnership with CFI.
The students are partners because their tuition fees help pay for
the time of the principal investigators. Ultimately, however, the
universities are in the position of having to juggle all of this and
make their ends meet.
|
| I will stop right there, Mr. Chairman. If I could offer help by
answering your questions, I would be delighted to do so.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you, Mr. Brzustowski. Senator Moore
was the instigator of this study. I will therefore turn to him to
open questioning.
|
| Senator Moore: Welcome, doctor. I do not know where to start
here. You have raised many aspects of this matter in your
presentation. When you talked about NSERC paying the direct
costs of research, you mentioned the Canada Research Chairs.
How do you fund those? Are those on a matching basis? Do the
institutions have to match funds?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: Not for the Canada Research Chairs
program. The institutions receive $100,000 a year for the junior
chairs - that is, the so-called "tier two" chairs - $200,000 a
year for the so-called "tier one" chairs or the senior chairs. There
is no requirement to match. What we hear from universities is that
their range of responses is very broad across the country. Some
universities put in additional funds to help the chair holders get
started in research; other universities draw a lot of that money to
help with the indirect costs for research across the whole
university. It is very variable across the country. The universities
were given that freedom in the design of that program.
|
| Senator Moore: You mentioned the Canada Foundation for
Innovation. Approximately 40 per cent comes from federal
government funding and 60 per cent from the universities?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: That is correct. About 60 per cent comes
from partners, whoever they might be. Sometimes those partners
turn out to be the provincial governments that match exactly the
federal funding. Sometimes the university itself dips into its
endowment funds and its fundraising campaigns to provide some
of that funding. Sometimes, as I understand it, even federal
agencies such as ACOA take a hand in helping to provide the
remaining 60 per cent.
|
| Senator Moore: This is not directly on the point, Mr. Chair
man, but I think all these things are interrelated.
|
| What happens with the smaller schools who do not have the
corporate partners in their neighbourhoods or who do not have the
endowments? How do they participate?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: That is a real challenge. It is a challenge that
we have been hearing at NSERC about our own programs, in
which we provide money in partnership with industry. There is
not an absence of that in Atlantic Canada specifically. However, if
there are no industries in the area, then finding industrial partners
is very difficult. There is no question about that.
|
| At NSERC, we were very concerned when the issue was first
raised in connection with the distribution of Canada chairs. Our
senior management team visited 11 universities in Atlantic
Canada. I was part of a group that visited five universities - the
other group visited six - to find out what the problems were. We
then went to Manitoba and to Saskatchewan in the fall of that
year to visit five universities there. There is no single reason why
universities are where they are. The difficult case is that of a small
university that, because it feels it can contribute to local
development, economic and social development, has now decided
to get into research without a previous history of it.
|
| They may not have graduate programs and therefore they have
no access to our graduate funding. There may be no industry in
the area. They cannot find industrial partners. This is difficult
because they also find it hard to attract faculty members who
would see that as a place to conduct their careers if they have
aspirations to do research. They must bootstrap themselves. Our
program of providing research support in laboratories for selected
undergraduates is one of the biggest assistances to the small
universities.
|
| However, one also sees universities that at one time had a far
better research reputation than they do today. Why? The
intellectual capacity remains. The capacity to be productive has
declined. Budget cuts have eliminated technicians in laboratories.
There is a university in the Prairies that at one time was one of
our leading research universities. Its faculty of science has lost
every single technician.
|
| Senator Moore: Where have they gone?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: They were allowed to take early retirement
because the university needed to make budget cuts over the years
due to provincial funding decisions.
|
| Senator Moore: Was it a function of the facilities as well?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: It is a function of the facilities now. The
facilities are decaying because the technicians are not there. It is a
vicious circle. It is very tough.
|
| Senator Moore: How do we break that circle?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: We break it by recognizing the problems and
making targeted investments. The problems are different in
different universities. We do not expect suddenly that these
institutions will win those funds in the national competitions for
research funds. It would not do them any good anyway because
they do not have the capacity to fund the indirect costs. They
must have targeted funds for a number of years. They will
demonstrate that their greatest need is for technicians; therefore,
the money can be used for that. If the greatest need is to improve
this building and build a modern workshop, the money can be
used for that. If the greatest need is to attract a couple of young
faculty members, give them money to get started and the promise
of a career. The money can be spent this way. What is needed is
targeted funding, perceptively used.
|
| One must balance, on the one hand, the requirements for
accountability - accountability in the spending of public funds
- but, on the other hand, the ability to be discerning in providing
money for what is needed, rather than making the universities fit
into some program that does not really meet their needs. This is
what we need to do.
|
| It is easy to say that, senator. That is our diagnosis after visiting
16 universities that have had problems. It is easier to say than do,
obviously.
|
| Senator Moore: It is easier to say than do. It is difficult to
observe and to study this matter without looking at the
universities that we have across the country and the tremendous
range of endowments and abilities to participate in funding
programs that are available. It is quite a chicken and egg thing. If
you do not have the funds, you do not attract the researchers, you
do not attract the professors, you do not attract the good students.
They cannot all go to the major cities in the country and they
cannot all go to the United States. We do not want that to happen.
|
| I think of my own region, and as a senator that is part of my
responsibility. In Atlantic Canada we have 17 universities.
|
| Senator Stratton: Why?
|
| Senator Moore: We are good at teaching people. We have
been doing it for hundreds of years.
|
| Senator Stratton: My question always comes down to, why
17? What is the population of Atlantic Canada?
|
| Senator Moore: Shall I respond to the honourable senator's
question?
|
| The Chairman: Be my guest, Senator Moore.
|
| Senator Moore: I will finish up with the previous item first
and then I will come to Senator Stratton's question.
|
| This is the situation: We are educating a huge percentage of the
university students from across the country, including some from
out West, but we are not getting, in any sense of fairness, the
appropriate participation. We are not able to participate in the
funding programs, all of which exacerbates the matter of the
accumulated deferred maintenance.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: May I differ with you in one particular? I
think you will be happy that I differ with you on this. You
mentioned that the universities are not able to attract good
students.
|
| Senator Moore: I am not saying that we do not have good
students. I am saying that this circle, if it is not broken, could lead
to a reduction in the quality of teachers, researchers and students.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: It may be that the students will lead the way
out of the vicious circle. Our experience has been that
universities, even those that do not have graduate programs, do
not have access to funds for graduate student support, do expose
their best students to serious research experiences in laboratories
over the summer. Some of that undergraduate research is
sufficiently good that it is actually published. Our program, called
the Undergraduate Student Research Award, is in fact targeted at
the small universities to assist in that. These people are superb
candidates for graduate study. It so happens there is graduate
study available elsewhere if those universities do not have
graduate programs, but if some of these universities collectively
decided to open graduate programs, they would have first-rate
graduate student candidates on the spot.
|
| This is not unique to Canada. Some of the best of the New
England small colleges, the arts and science colleges, produce
superb candidates for graduate studies in the research universities
of the United States. It is an exact comparison.
|
| Senator Moore: With respect to indirect costs, I assume by
that you mean deferred maintenance?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: I would include maintenance; deferred being
the accumulation of decisions.
|
| Senator Moore: Exactly. When NSERC decides to award
funds, is there a percentage allocated for facilities and ongoing
maintenance of those facilities? You said in your remarks that
universities are on their own.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: They are, and it is worse than that. The
answer is no. In fact, on the first phase, you will see that we are
able to give 39 per cent of what people request. We have a
fragmented research funding system in this country, and com
pared to the United States, for example, we provide far less
money.
|
| In the United States, the National Science Foundation would
provide for all of the indirect costs. They would provide the
salaries of the professors, who are the principal investigators, for
at least two months in the summer, and they would do it all from
one source. They would either accept the proposal and fund it
almost totally, or not accept it. We have this fragmented approach,
which has resulted in a difficult situation.
|
| Senator Moore: I understand that in the United States, the
funding for facilities and indirect costs can be anywhere from 15
to 115 per cent, and it averages out to 50, 60 per cent.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: Absolutely.
|
| Senator Moore: I view those people as competition for our
teachers, for our researchers and for our students, so perhaps we
need to get away from this fragmented approach and try to
address the situation in a different manner.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: If one addresses that within the current
budgets, without providing new money, then obviously a smaller
percentage of people would be funded and the chances that the
small universities will surge ahead in that are pretty slim. That is
why I come back to the point about targeted investments,
recognizing their specific needs and allowing them to compete
much more successfully in the national competitions.
|
| By the way, that is what the universities are asking for. They do
not ask us to lower the standards for them. They do not. The
intellectual capacity is there. The ability to be productive is
lacking.
|
| The Chairman: Senator Moore, I am concerned about the
witness's schedule. Perhaps we can come back to you.
|
| Senator Banks: Following up on what you just said and the
question that Senator Moore asked, would we, in your candid and
personal view, be better off right now to solve the problem by
assuming there is not much more money available - which at
the moment, given events, might be the case - and spreading the
butter less thinly? Would we be better off doing fewer little
projects that are not properly funded, reducing the number of
research projects, and fund each of them better? Would it be
better to reduce the numbers of things that are going on and
specialize?
|
| To put the question in another way, if there were not more
money available, would we do a better job of dispensing funds by
restricting the things on which we require that it be spent?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: I will answer that and I will be candid. This
is my personal opinion. We need two things: We need a strong
base of well-educated people and a large number of faculty
members active in research so that they are capable of teaching
people who understand today's science and today's technology,
not just because of the new knowledge they will create in Canada,
but because that gives us access to new knowledge from around
the world. That requires the base. Above that base, what we need
is a strategy. A strategy that I like, that I think is the only one that
makes sense, I label "strategic leapfrogging." Do not try to catch
up on all fronts by providing more money for everything that we
do so that we do a little more of it a little faster, a little better.
Rather, accept the fact that in some areas, we are not at the
leading edge, but we are sufficiently good that a targeted
investment will take us to the leading edge. That would be my
answer - a strong base across the country, and that does include
those targeted investments into smaller universities. Beyond
building that base, with strategic leapfrogging, making tough
decisions about where we have the potential to leap ahead of the
competition, we should invest in a targeted way in our best areas.
This idea did not originate with me. The strategy of Genome
Canada is precisely that.
|
| Senator Banks: To take that as an example, there are some
products of this research - I hesitate to use the word "products,"
but sometimes they are products of one kind or another - in
which the university retains an ongoing, proprietary and residual
interest. To what extent does that return any of the research's
expenses to the university?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: Again, I will give a candid opinion and I will
paint with a broad brush. At this point, that activity is only
sufficiently developed in Canada on the average to pay the costs
of administering the research offices. What matters is that
"invented in Canada" should mean "made in Canada," if the
invention came out of publicly funded research.
|
| This is the case with those short-term research projects where
industry is a partner and comes to the table with its own money.
Our experience is that a dollar of NSERC funds in our research
projects attracts $1.70 of industry money, and that $2.70 is spent
at the university. If it puts money on the table, industry will use
the results more quickly.
|
| The longer-term results of basic research that can make huge
changes and produce radical innovations in the way we do things
take time. Many of these innovations should not be commercialized. They should be in the public domain for all the good
reasons. However, some of them should be commercialized to
provide the feedback to the economy that creates the tax revenues
that pay for this stuff.
|
| The main goal should be new economic activity, new jobs,
industries and companies. It should not be to get revenue back
into the universities. The perspective becomes quite distorted if
the whole object of the exercise is for the university to retain
control and to seek relief from its budgetary problems in trying to
commercialize the results of some of its research. That should be
done by the private sector for the benefit of the economy as a
whole. Realistically, that is the only thing possible, because the
people who know much more about this than I do say that the
private investment required to take a proven idea out of a research
lab and turn it into a successful product in the market is many
times greater than the public investment in doing the research in
the first place. In addition, the private investors take on all the
risks of failure to reach the market or failure in the market.
|
| I do not see that as a solution, but I see it as a hugely important
activity for the nation.
|
| Senator Banks: With most stories, there is side A and side B,
and the truth is somewhere else. Do you have any sense that if the
cavalry came charging over the hill with bags of money, that we
would be rewarding imprudent management?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: I do not think so. That would not come
spontaneously. Do not forget, researchers are people who are at
their best when they do what they are trained to do: research.
They very often do not understand the financial structure of their
own universities. If the university obtained additional funds, they
would have to be serious about managing the money. The money
would not be suddenly distributed as a new source of research
funds. It would have to be targeted to solving the problems that
existing research funds create. Those problems are all listed and
include issues such as insufficient technicians and deferred
maintenance. If this were seen as a windfall for researchers to
suddenly do more of what they were doing before, the whole
point would be missed and the problem would not be solved, no
matter how much money you put in.
|
| Senator Stratton: It behoves those of us sitting around this
table to perhaps ask some difficult questions. When I think of
post-secondary education, part of the problem I see is that we
have a population of 30 million people spread unevenly across
the country. As an example, 40 years ago, Manitoba had one
university and a college; it now has three universities with
community colleges in a population of 1 million people. It
becomes very difficult to support that kind of infrastructure with
that kind of population base. That was my question to Senator
Moore: If there are 17 universities in the four Atlantic provinces,
that is a pretty high ratio when you think about it.
|
| We must ask ourselves a question, and it follows from what
Senator Banks has stated. Perhaps there must be a rationalization
that, as you have said, targets rather than continues to expand. I
know that in Manitoba they are talking about developing another
university of the north. I really am amazed at that kind of
thinking, not that it is inappropriate for the folks up there, but
simply because of the cost.
|
| In British Columbia, Prince George has a university of the
north. One starts to wonder. It is relatively easy to create new
bodies, but when you talk to anyone in the universities, and in any
other venues like that, for example, symphony orchestras or the
ballet, it becomes clear that as soon as you create an
infrastructure, you must support it from there to eternity.
|
| It is extremely difficult and it is of serious concern to me.
Despite our small population base, we continue to create more
and more institutions. That puts a severe strain on the situation.
|
| Would you care to respond to that?
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: You are posing a difficult question, senator.
|
| Senator Stratton: Yes, I am, but I think it has to be posed.
|
| Dr. Brzustowski: I hope you will be satisfied with my opinions
as an individual because these are not issues that the council has
considered.
|
| I think we make too much of the fact that our population is
small. Thirty-one million is not a small population. It is dispersed,
and not all the distances are in the West. I can tell you that from
personal experience.
|
| The fact is, some of the things we are talking about do not
depend on the size of the country. Sweden's population is
2 million smaller than Ontario's, and it has some superbly
equipped scientific institutions. Their only drawback is that there
are not enough people in them.
|
| Ultimately, what matters in universities is the average number
of students facing the average professor. We cannot increase that
beyond a certain number and still maintain an effective education
system that contains a component of social interaction. It must do
that. People must have the chance to test out ideas on one another.
|
| If you say that number has to be 20 or 25, I say that it is closer
to 25 in this country than 20. When the universities were saying
they were in a crisis, it was 16, but now it is much closer to 24.
Once you have that situation, then what are the costs of either
aggregating that number into small units in big universities or
exclusive units in very small universities? I have not seen a study
of that, but I suspect that the cost is not huge. The important point
is getting the young people in certain numbers into the classroom.
Whether you do that in a very large university but still maintain
quality through relatively small class sizes, or whether you do it
in the smaller institutions, depends a lot on local choice and local
culture.
|
| You mentioned British Columbia. I have been informed that
one of the effects of creating the University of Northern British
Columbia in Prince George is that, contrary to the expectation that
this should be the "university of the north," it is in fact meeting
the needs of people from the southern parts of the province where
the spaces are in short supply.
|
| I would have to know a lot more about local details before I
could answer the question.
|
| I have visited the University of Winnipeg and the University of
Manitoba several times. I see places full of young people getting
an education. I do not see places sitting empty with infrastructure
being paid for and not used.
|
| These are very difficult issues. The way the system has evolved
in this country, we deal with the kind of question I just addressed
separately from the issue of research and working at the
intellectual frontiers.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you, Dr. Brzustowski. Bon voyage.
|
| Our next group of witnesses is from the Department of
Finance. We greatly appreciate their attendance and their
willingness, as always, to help us in our work. I do not suppose
they are here because the federal government wants to take full
ownership of this problem. Perhaps they wish to leave an entirely
contrary impression with us.
|
| Senators, our principal witness today is well-known to all of
you from her previous appearances at this committee. I refer to
Susan Peterson, Assistant Deputy Minister, Federal-Provincial
Relations and Social Policy Branch.
|
| Ms Peterson, I invite to you introduce your colleagues and to
make your opening statement.
|
| Ms Susan Peterson, Assistant Deputy Minister, Federal-
Provincial Relations and Social Policy Branch, Department of
Finance: Mr. Chairman, with me today are Barbara Anderson,
Director of Federal-Provincial Fiscal Relations; Stéphane Hardy,
who is part of the Social Policy Branch of the Department of
Finance and who has been working on the education issue in
particular; and John Connell, who is from the economic
development part of the Department of Finance. Mr. Connell has
worked closely on some of the new initiatives that the federal
government has taken with respect to research efforts.
|
| Mr. Chairman, I very much appreciate your invitation to join
you again today. Your committee is inquiring into deferred
maintenance costs in Canada's post-secondary education institu
tions. Of course, post-secondary education is fundamentally a
provincial responsibility. It is provincial governments that decide
how much funding they will provide to these institutions in this
country for their ongoing operations, including deferred mainten
ance.
|
| However, it is certainly true that the federal government does
play a significant role with respect to post-secondary education,
notably through its transfers to provinces and territories, through
investments in research, and through programs to ensure
post-secondary education is widely accessible to qualified
Canadians everywhere, regardless of their income.
|
| The Department of Finance is responsible for administering the
major federal transfers to provinces and territories. I understand
that is why you have invited me here today.
|
| The funds that the federal government transfers to the
provinces and territories each year are significant. This year, the
three major transfer programs will amount to approximate
ly $45 billion. To give you a sense of what this means to the
provinces, it make up about 18 per cent of Alberta's revenues, at
one end of the scale, and about 43 per cent of Nova Scotia's
revenues at the other end. The territories stand apart from the
provinces. In the three territories, federal transfers make up 72 per
cent of Yukon's revenues, 78 per cent of the Northwest
Territories' revenues, and 95 per cent of Nunavut's revenues.
|
| Given their magnitude, these transfers obviously support many
different provincial programs and services. They ensure the
provinces have the financial capacity to provide Canadians,
wherever they live, with reasonably comparable levels of public
services.
|
| Having heard some of the remarks of the previous witness, I
would like to point out that these transfers to provinces and
territories create a big difference between Canada and the United
States. There is nothing equivalent in the U.S. Thus, when one
looks at how universities are funded in the United States and what
they get through their research institutions and what have you, we
could add that up. However, these major transfers to provinces
and territories in Canada have no equivalent in the United States.
|
| [Translation]
|
| The federal government provides most of its transfers to
provinces and territories through three large programs: first, the
Canada Health and Social Transfer (CHST), which was created in
1996.
|
| The CHST is a block fund intended to support health care,
social assistance, social services, early childhood development
and post-secondary education. Under the structure of this block
fund, provinces are entirely free to choose how they will allocate
their CHST money.
|
| Transfers under the CHST are made in two forms: cash and tax
transfers. This year, the CHST will provide $34.0 billion to
provincial and territorial governments - $18.3 billion in cash and
an estimated $15.7 billion in tax points.
|
| A bit of history might be useful here. One of the CHST's
predecessor programs was Established Programs Financing, or
EPF.
|
| Like the CHST, EPF was a block fund which took the form of
a cash transfer and tax transfer. Unlike the CHST, however, EPF
legislation notionally earmarked how much money would go to
health care - 70 per cent- and how much would go to
post-secondary education - 30 per cent.
|
| I say "notionally earmarked" because even under EPF,
provinces were free to allocate the federal transfers according to
their own priorities. The notional allocation reflected the
distribution of federal funds for post-secondary education and
health care when EPF was introduced in 1977.
|
| [English]
|
| When the Canada Health and Social Transfer came into effect
in 1996, federal transfers for post-secondary education and health
care, as well as the funding for social assistance and social
services under the Canada Assistance Plan, were rolled into this
new program. The important thing is that under the CHST, there
is no notional amount allocated for any specific sector. As I
indicated earlier, provinces can spend the money they receive
according to their own individual priorities. This approach is part
and parcel of the maturing of the fiscal relations between the two
orders of government in the Canadian federation.
|
| The second major transfer program is equalization. I have been
before you before to discuss that and I know that you will be
studying it in more depth at a later date.
|
| In brief, equalization ensures that the less prosperous provinces
have sufficient revenues to provide reasonably comparable levels
of public services at reasonably comparable levels of taxation. As
you know, seven provinces currently qualify for equalization
payments. These payments, too, are unconditional. Provinces can
spend them as they see fit. This year, the seven eligible provinces
will receive payments under this program totalling approximately $10.6 billion.
|
| The third major federal transfer program is designed specifically to support the territories and is known as territorial formula
financing. It ensures that territorial governments can provide
services to their residents, recognizing the higher costs of
providing such services in the North. This year, these payments to
Canada's three territories will total $1.5 billion. Again, the
territories can use these funds as they see fit.
|
| Together, these transfer programs constitute the primary
financial instrument through which the federal government
contributes to the ongoing support of the post-secondary
education sector and its institutions.
|
| The picture of federal support for higher education is far from
complete if one looks only at these transfers. These general
transfers are supplemented in several ways by federal programs
and instruments closely targeted to post-secondary education and
to research. These targeted programs are important in understanding the full role that the federal government plays in post-second
ary education, and therefore I want to mention them today.
|
| First, I would like to outline the long-standing role of the
federal government in promoting access to higher education for
Canadians. The Canada Student Loans Program was introduced as
far back as 1964. It has played a very significant role for almost
40 years in helping young people with the cost of their education.
This year, it is providing $1.7 billion in loans to nearly 400,000
students in Canada. In 1998, the program was expanded to
include Canada study grants. Students with dependants who have
financial needs in excess of the maximum loans available can
now receive grants of up to $3,000. Last year, nearly 65,000
students were awarded these grants and they totalled close to $100
million. At the same time, in 1998, a number of measures were
put in place to help graduates who encounter difficulty in
repaying Canada student loans.
|
| Perhaps the most significant among recent initiatives is the
Canada Education Savings Grant. To assist families in saving for
their children's higher education, the government adds to the
amounts that families put into Registered Education Savings Plans
each year. The grant is equal to 20 per cent on amounts up
to $2,000, or $400 a year.
|
| This grant is proving to be a great success. Before it was
introduced in 1998, there were approximately 700,000 RESPs in
the country, representing $2.4 billion. As of September 2000, a
very short time later, the number has increased to 1.6 million
RESPs, representing $6.7 billion. You can see that in a very short
time, there has been nearly a threefold increase in funds being set
aside by families specifically for the higher education of their
children.
|
| I will mention also Canada Millennium Scholarships, which
were introduced in 1998. They also help to make higher education
affordable. They provide about 90,000 needy students each year
with scholarships averaging $3,000. This directly reduces the
debt that they would otherwise incur.
|
| I would like to turn to investments in research at universities.
|
| [Translation]
|
| The federal government also has a long-standing role in
supporting the research role of Canada's post-secondary institu
tions. I would like to speak to this now.
|
| First, there are the three federal granting councils that support
research: the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
(SSHRC), created in 1977; the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council (NSERC), created in 1978; and the Canadian
Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), created in 2000.
|
| The granting councils are the principal source of government
funding for researchers in Canada's universities, community
colleges and research hospitals. Their budgets have been
increased significantly since the recent period of fiscal consolidation. Today, the budgets of the granting councils total over $1
billion per annum.
|
| In addition to the granting councils, the government has
recently put in place new instruments to support and promote
research. In 1997, the Canada Foundation for Innovation was
created. It is an arm's-length foundation with a mandate to fund
research infrastructure and equipment in universities, research
hospitals, community colleges and other research institutes. The
government has invested a total of $3.2 billion in the CFI.
|
| [English]
|
| Most recently, in the 2000 budget, the government announced
the creation of the Canada research chairs.
|
| This program is designed to help universities attract and retain
world-leading researchers and to build a critical mass of research
excellence in Canada. Funded at $900 million over five years,
this program will support about 2,000 chairs throughout Canada's
universities. You can see that the federal government has recently
found innovative ways of helping research in this country.
|
| This completes my opening remarks, Mr. Chairman. As you
can see, the federal government plays a significant and a
multi-faceted role in supporting higher education in the country. It
transfers large sums to the provinces. It promotes equality of
opportunity by helping to ensure that financial barriers do not
stand in the way of as many Canadians as possible benefiting
from higher education. It plays a very active role in supporting the
research function of our universities.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you, Ms Peterson. You have properly
drawn our attention to the block-funding concept that exists under
CHST and existed also under EPF to a lesser extent. When Dr.
Brzustowski was here from the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council, you perhaps heard him advocate targeted
grants from the federal government to universities. His concept
was that the government or its agencies would say to one
university, "You need to beef up your research capacity in this or
that area," and to another university, "You need to improve your
physical facilities in this or that area, and here is money to do so."
That is far from the block-funding concept that we have been
discussing. Can you think of any constitutional reason why
agencies such as NSERC could not engage in that kind of targeted
funding direct to universities?
|
| Ms Peterson: The federal government, in its role in supporting
research in universities, has worked through third parties, in effect
through the granting councils, which have a system of peer review
for all the requests they get for grants. The federal government
certainly leaves it in the hands of these agencies to decide who
merits the money.
|
| Similarly, when the federal government created the Foundation
for Innovation, it made sure that it was an arm's length,
independent body that received the applications for the improvement of research facilities. That institution makes the decisions
about who gets the money and who does not.
|
| The federal government has carefully established a pattern of
ensuring that intermediaries make those decisions.
|
| The Chairman: Those agencies do not have to go through the
provincial authorities, do they?
|
| Ms Peterson: No, they do not.
|
| The Chairman: If those agencies were able to persuade the
government to let them have the money, no present policy of the
government would be violated if they got into the business of
capital funding for physical facilities at those universities?
|
| Mr. John Connell, Senior Chief, Economic Development
Policy Division, Economic Development and Corporate Finance Branch, Depart of Finance: The granting councils are
free to support the research environment at the universities. There
exists provision in their legislation for making grants and
contributions for that purpose. Indeed, we have seen over the
years the granting councils making contributions to the capital
costs of research infrastructure, a role that the CFI now plays to a
much greater extent. There certainly would be questions from a
policy perspective about contributions from the granting councils
for capital costs of buildings, renovations, repairs and so forth at
the universities concerned.
|
| The Chairman: Currently, they are not prohibited from doing
so except by budgetary considerations; is that correct?
|
| Ms Peterson: There is a difference between supporting the
infrastructure to do research and supporting the construction of
parking lots and student residences and teaching theatres.
|
| The Chairman: I will leave it at that.
|
| Senator Moore: When the department decides on the policy of
establishing one of these funding institutions or augmenting their
funds, what thought is given to the facilities component and the
maintenance of those facilities in arriving at the sum of money to
be provided?
|
| Ms Peterson: When the federal government set up the
Canadian Foundation for Innovation and the research chairs, it
had a very clear idea of the sorts of things it wanted to support,
and the mandates of these institutions are clearly set out. Beyond
that, in setting these up and deciding how much money to
provide, the government did not say, "We know exactly how
much money is needed for buildings or how much is needed for
test tubes." It is more global than that, but nonetheless targeted.
No tally sheet was done of the sorts of things that I have seen
from some of the associations as to, for instance, how they arrived
at a global figure on deferred maintenance. The federal
government does not do that because it effectively is not, at the
moment, in the business of dealing with deferred maintenance on
university facilities at large.
|
| Senator Moore: If one of these agencies, Ms Peterson, decides
to provide millions of dollars of funding and the university does
not have the facility or has a facility that it will have to be
expanded or somehow altered to be able to conduct the research
work properly, is that not considered? As I understand it, and I
mentioned this to the previous witness, in the United States,
anywhere from 15 to 115 per cent of the research monies is added
to that sum for facilities and their maintenance. The work has to
be done somewhere.
|
| Mr. Connell: Again, I think the reference is to the so-called
"indirect costs" of research, funding for which, universities are
seeking.
|
| Senator Moore: Yes.
|
| Mr. Connell: The American system is a very different one in
the types of cost that are covered - for example, the costs of
research. Infrastructure in CFI would be considered an indirect
cost in the United States. We are indeed providing contributions
now toward the so-called "indirect" research costs. There are
several other examples to which I would draw your attention.
|
| The first is the decision in the 2000 economic statement and
fall update to provide an allocation of $400 million to the
Canada Foundation for Innovation to support the operating costs
of research infrastructure. Hitherto, the CFI had been restricted to
the capital costs of the equipment concerned, and they are very
specific about the types of costs that would be covered. However,
through an amendment to the funding agreement between the
Minister of Industry and the foundation, the foundation was
provided with this sum for what is arguably part of the indirect
costs of research.
|
| Another consideration is the Canada Research Chairs Program,
with an allocation of $900 million over five years. For the first
time, the government recognized that this sum would be for the
entire costs of research, not just the direct or indirect, so they are
free to use that money to support a world-class research
environment for the chairs in whatever way the universities see
fit.
|
| Third, I think a very interesting and helpful result of the federal
government's increased support for research has been the filing of
strategic plans by the universities concerned with the chairs
program, with the Canada Foundation for Innovation. It has
sparked a real rethinking of the research environment the
universities themselves are trying to create.
|
| Clearly, when there is a proposal to the CFI, to the chairs
program, to the granting councils, those strategic research plans
must demonstrate that the university is capable of seeing the
project through and achieving the results associated with it.
|
| Increased coordination within the whole research complex has
resulted from much of this funding, and we consider that a
positive development.
|
| Senator Moore: This has now started with CFI and Canada
Research Chairs Program?
|
| Mr. Connell: Exactly.
|
| Senator Moore: That must be the first time that we have really
addressed it directly, so it is a start, but we still have this
outstanding matter with which to deal.
|
| Senator Banks: Staying on the point of Senator Moore's
question, the Chair has raised a cogent point. We need to find out
what constraints, if any, exist in the mandates of the granting
organizations with respect to answering this question. I will give
you a show business analysis because that is the area I come
from. If I am investing in a movie - God forbid - and the
producer says to me, "This movie will cost $4 million," I look at
it and say, "How much is your marketing budget?" If the answer
is not at least $2 million, in other words, making the total
budget $6 million, no one in his or her right mind would invest
in that movie.
|
| It seems to me that we are downloading on the universities,
because we heard this morning from Mr. Brzustowski that there
are important administrative overhead expenses attendant upon
research - for example, the critical mass of stuff, the physical
plant and the fertile ground they have to have - which, at the
moment, seem to fall outside the granting ability of the
organizations, including the new money. If I am not mistaken,
the $400 million to CFI, for example, pays for expenses that are
directly attributable to particular research projects. This machine
will cost this much money, and it will cost this much money to fix
the room to house the machine and have a technician to operate it.
That does not allow for the payment of any money having to do
with, as Mr. Brzustowski pointed out, the library, the parking lots,
the teaching theatres, the accounting, the legal research and the
ethical research that might have to go into this. It seems to me
there are constraints in the granting programs of the federal
government. Am I correct in that assumption?
|
| Mr. Connell: Yes.
|
| Senator Banks: Before CHST took its present form, there was,
as you described, a notional amount of 30 per cent of the previous
grants which had strings attached, and the federal government
indicated, more or less, that this money would be spent on
post-secondary education. Do we know, and failing that, can we
find out, whether the provinces in an aggregate way, or
individually, spend notionally 30 per cent of CHST grants on
post-secondary education?
|
| Ms Peterson: Certainly, when the EPF had these notional,
invisible strings attached, if transfers from the federal government
were increasing and, in turn, the provinces were not increasing
their funds to the post-secondary education community at large,
then the constituencies certainly made sure that their provincial
governments heard about it. In the days of strings attached, no
university ever spent less on post-secondary education than the
notional 30 per cent it was getting from the federal government. If
a university were spending just a little more than that, it would
mean that the federal government was funding most of the
post-secondary education in that province, and that was never the
intent. However, it is true that no province ever spent less than the
amount it was notionally getting for post-secondary education
from the federal government.
|
| Senator Banks: Now we do not look at that question?
|
| Ms Peterson: No, we do not.
|
| Senator Banks: Thank you.
|
| Ms Peterson: The public debate on that goes on. The federal
government cut transfers to provinces when it created the CHST,
but since then, transfers have more than regained that lost ground
and will continue to grow. In fact, transfers to provinces will grow
faster than anticipated growth in federal revenues. There is a good
track record out there, but as I say, as part of the maturing of the
federation, the federal government no longer looks over the
provinces' shoulders with respect to these major transfers. I want
to say it is part of the deal - and in a sense, that is right - the
idea being that the provinces are not accountable to the federal
government for the use of these transfers. The provinces are
accountable to their own citizens for the use of the money.
|
| When first ministers came to an agreement on health care and
early childhood development last September, there was an
innovative approach taken to transfers to provinces in the sense
that they undertook to report to their citizens on their health care
systems and on what they were doing in the field of early
childhood development. The Prime Minister said, "Here is money
to support these agreements." Again, the pattern has been
established that provinces are not reporting to the federal
government. They are reporting to citizens, not just how much
money is being spent in these areas, but also what the outcomes
are.
|
| Senator Banks: Is there a corporate view, if that is the right
word, in the department on the general question of earmarked,
targeted funding?
|
| Ms Peterson: Nothing is ever uniform and simple. The federal
government pursues its objectives with and through the provinces
in a number of different fashions. For instance, there are labour
market development agreements with most of the provinces, and
there the money is earmarked for certain things. Money is being
transferred to the provinces for official languages and education.
That money is earmarked. There is earmarked money for legal
aid.
|
| There are a number of earmarked transfers. Compared to the
CHST, they are small, but nonetheless they are earmarked
transfers, and one way of pursuing common objectives with the
provinces.
|
| There are the big transfers on the post-secondary education and
health fronts, supplemented now by these other instruments we
have been describing, which are recent innovations and are new
ways of targeting money for specific purposes in the post-second
ary education field.
|
| Some new instruments are targeting money in the health field,
too, for medical equipment and so forth. One never has to do just
one thing or the other. It is a combination of these major transfers
that come with no strings attached, and these other instruments,
some of them old, some of them new, which are targeted.
|
| The Chairman: However, we do have the Social Union
Agreement now. I presume that if the federal government, in its
wisdom and flush with cash, decided to institute a new program,
for example, a shared-cost program with the provinces to try to
address the problem we have been discussing here - capital
facilities and so on at universities - it would have to follow the
process set out in that agreement?
|
| Ms Peterson: Indeed, some people think the social union
framework agreement applies to absolutely everything in the
social policy domain, but it does not. I am trying to refresh my
memory as to whether education is one of them. Frankly, my
memory does not serve me well at this particular juncture. If it is
one of the ones named, then the answer to the question is yes.
|
| Senator Cools: I wish to continue on the point that Senator
Banks has raised and Ms Peterson's response, in which she said
two things, one of which was that provincial governments account
to their own citizens for the expenditure of these dollars.
|
| My question is: What are the formal means and mechanisms by
which provincial governments account for these expenditures to
their own citizens; and two, please explain to me the meaning of
your words, "this approach," on page 6 of your presentation.
|
| This approach is part and parcel of the maturity of fiscal
relations between the two orders of government in the
Canadian federation.
|
| Perhaps you could tell us what "maturity" means, in dollars and
other terms?
|
| Ms Peterson: With respect to your first question, of course the
provinces have always put out public accounts as to how they
spend their taxpayers' money. What was innovative in the
agreements reached by first ministers was that there will be -
and an attempt is underway now - both in the health care field
and in early childhood development, to sit down with the
provinces and come up with some common ways of measuring
what good this money is doing. Instead of each province reporting
on whatever it chooses and ending up with something that is not
at all necessarily comparable, the idea is to come up with at least
a set of common measures that all provinces will use so that their
citizens can then say, "Hey, you are doing a great job here
compared to the other provinces," or, "You are not doing a good
job compared to the other provinces." To have meaningful
measures, they must be comparable. Work is going on now with
the provinces to come up with a set of common measures in those
domains so that the reporting to citizens can be increasingly
meaningful.
|
| With respect to the use of the word "maturing," when the
federal government started to support the provinces in a number
of domains, the first instrument tended to be a cost-sharing one,
which, for instance under the Canada Assistance Plan, stated that
however much money was spent on social welfare would be
matched dollar for dollar. This is when these programs were new
and the idea was to make it easier for the provinces to get good
programs up and running. As time went by, cost-shared programs
became problematic for both orders of government.
|
| You can imagine provincial ministers sitting around the cabinet
table and minister X says, "If we spend a dollar here, you know
what that will mean - two," and minister Y says, "Well, I do not
have anything as good as that but my priority is just as important.
I need to spend a dollar here." These cost-shared programs
skewed provincial decision-making in favour of spending more
money where the federal government would match dollars, as
opposed to other areas where it may have been more sensible and
more effective. It was like a magnet attracting money, not
necessarily in the most cost-effective way.
|
| Second, the not-so-well-off provinces resented the fact that the
better-off provinces could attract more federal dollars simply
because they could spend more. Some provinces did not like this
open-ended cost-sharing for that reason.
|
| It also meant that the federal government was not in control of
its own budget. It had to match whatever dollars provincial
governments spent. It certainly had that downside.
|
| One of the things that I recall from debates under the Canada
Assistance Plan is that the federal government would cost share
some child care expenses under the plan, but you could not have
the child care facilities in an elementary school setting because
then the boundary line between school, that is, education, and
child care was being crossed and the federal government sure as
heck was not getting into the business of cost-sharing education.
If the provinces wanted child care money from the federal
government, they needed to be sure that those facilities were
anywhere but where may have been the most sensible place to
have them. Any cost-sharing program must have boundaries
between what is sharable and what is not, and those boundaries
had some bizarre, and not necessarily effective, results.
|
| When I talk about maturing, I am talking about getting out of
that way of doing business, not hanging over the shoulders of the
provinces so much, and saying, "Look, here is some money; go
spend it according to your priorities in the most efficient, effective
way, and be accountable to your own people."
|
| Senator Cools: I understand what you mean now by "mature."
|
| Senator Tunney: My intervention will be slightly different
from the one I would have presented previously.
|
| I have two issues that I believe are important or I would not
have intervened at all. The first is something I have been dealing
with virtually all of my adult life, and that is to persuade the
people with whom I deal of the benefits and the value of
education.
|
| I am an active, operating farmer who has spent many years
within farm organizations and working with farmers. I have
always tried to persuade them that education, research and
training is not a cost, but an investment with a dividend, and we
have many instances within agriculture to prove that.
|
| Governments, and others, need to keep at this matter of
persuading people that education is beneficial. Then governments
would be more inclined to respond to funding in areas where it is
critically short now and has declined over these few years when
cuts of all sorts were underway. That is the first issue.
|
| I have been involved with NSERC for many years, and much
of it with good responses and benefits. However, as government
support declined, farmers and farm organizations moved to fill in
the shortfall and to increase productivity, efficiency and food
safety to an optimum level. That is to the benefit of farmers, and
all of the other players and consumers. We need to see what we
can do better with less money. In this regard I am talking not just
about the University of Guelph, but others across the country
where we could not continue to maintain research farms, such as
the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa, at the level we had
previously.
|
| We have benefited from the enthusiastic cooperation of
individual farmers who now allow us to use research projects in
animal husbandry, as well as genetic and plant research, to the
point where we have to be proud of what has happened in the last
40 years.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you, Senator Tunney. Ms Peterson,
would you like to comment?
|
| Ms Peterson: Was there a question?
|
| Senator Tunney: If you do not care to comment, I will not be
offended. If you do care to comment, go ahead.
|
| Ms Peterson: I do not have a comment, Mr. Chairman. Thank
you, Senator Tunney. It was an interesting comment.
|
| The Chairman: I have the impression that the Department of
Finance, pre-eminently among the federal departments, keeps an
eye on a lot of things going on around the country with a view to
identifying future financial pressures on governments and
operating a kind of early warning system for ministers and other
people in the federal government.
|
| Since I do not follow these matters at all, I was rather startled
to learn from the study done by the Canadian Association of
University Business Officers that post-secondary institutions,
apparently for some considerable time, have been trying to
address their budgetary problems by allowing physical plant to
deteriorate, to the extent that there is now a backlog of $3.6 billion in deferred maintenance.
|
| Whether or not you saw this coming, have you done an
analysis of the study by the Canadian Association of University
Business Officers? Do you have any comment to make on it?
|
| Ms Peterson: I will ask Mr. Connell to comment.
|
| Mr. Connell: We are certainly aware of the study and have
looked at some of the recent Statistics Canada data on the
situation. Statistics Canada has just put out a report on university
finances in 1999 and 2000. It is showing significant increases in
the university sector, as we expected would be the case, given the
importance attributed by Canadians to health and education. The
provinces are now responding, after some periods of cuts.
|
| The provincial contributions are up significantly. There was an
increase of about 15 per cent in university revenues in the last
fiscal year. As to the buildings themselves, they reported
expenditures on those of about $430 million last year, which is
up about 5.7 per cent from the previous year. However, it is still
down from levels of spending in 1994 and 1995.
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| One way you could look at the deferred maintenance question
would be to go back over those fiscal years, determine what was
being spent before the program review period, which was
about $750 million per annum on buildings, equipment, renova
tions and so forth, and see the tailing off of that. It is now coming
back. I do not think that produces a figure close to $3.6 billion. It
is probably more in the vicinity of under $1 billion.
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| However, the business officers are in the best position to gauge
the needed repair of their own facilities and institutions. They
have said that there are urgent repairs that are more in line with
the number we expected, something which remains to be seen.
We have looked at the problem, but not in depth. We would
certainly rely on recommendations from the line departments
concerned in that area.
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| The Chairman: What line departments?
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| Mr. Connell: From Human Resources Development Canada
and possibly Industry Canada.
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| The Chairman: Has your department done an analysis of this
problem or this study of the business officers? If we asked for it
under the access to information regime, could we get it?
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| Ms Peterson: No.
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| Senator Moore, do you want to have the last word?
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| Senator Moore: I have three last words. Can I get them all in?
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| Looking at this amount of $3.6 billion as identified by
CAUBO, no one will write a cheque for that. We are not here
thinking that will happen. I would like to explore a few
possibilities, which I think come under your department, as ways
that we may approach this, such as encouraging the private sector,
philanthropic foundations, governments, universities themselves
and alumni to participate.
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| The culture in Canada is that private foundations only like to
invest in new structures. That is in spite of this situation we are
facing today. How do we change that culture to get them to invest
in deferred maintenance?
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| Most of these foundations like to put the money out, have it
recycled, and carry on so that they can continue to exist and to
help the universities. Could we have some sort of a system
whereby these foundations could be encouraged to provide
interest-free loans to universities? The interest costs involved in
the funding of these renovation projects is substantial. We could
have such a regime in place and the government could act as
guarantor for the repayment of those loans. Most universities are
pretty good risks. This has to be approached in a more
businesslike and structured manner. Mr. Brzustowski mentioned
earlier that we seem to have a fragmented approach. Perhaps this
is one idea we should pursue. We should encourage these private
foundations to provide funding for fix-ups, and not just a new
building with their name on it.
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| I would like you to consider that, and perhaps come back with
some kind of a response to the committee.
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| There was a piece in The Globe and Mail on August 18
wherein it was stated that Statistics Canada had reported that
donations from individuals had increased in the year 2000 to more
than $5 billion. Do you know what portion of that $5 billion
was donated to universities and colleges? I would like to know
the source, by province or territory. I would like to know the
destination, by province or territory. I am wondering if similar
data exists with respect to corporate giving. If so, I would like you
to provide the committee with those figures.
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| If there are ways to encourage the private sector, and the
universities themselves, to demonstrate their administrative
abilities and their needs, then we can get alumni, and private
individuals who may not be alumni but who may have some
connection to the institution, to give.
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| My third point, Mr. Chairman, has to do with charitable
donations. We permit political donations to be deducted from the
income tax that an individual is obliged to pay. Why do we not
look at some sort of a scheme whereby individuals can be
encouraged to give to universities and set up some type of a
deduction standard? The thesis behind political donations is that
this is how we support democratic systems in our country.
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| Education, as Senator Tunney and others have mentioned, is
deemed to be very important. How can we encourage that? It
seems to me that such a measure would help take the pressure off
the federal treasury and encourage people to do that.
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| I would like you to look at that and let us know if there is a
way that we can have donations to universities dealt with in a
similar fashion as political donations, with the same tax rate or
something similar.
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| Ms Peterson: Mr. Chairman, we can look into some of these
issues. Certainly, some of them have come up before. We will get
back to you with some information on them.
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| The Chairman: If there are no other questions, I wish to thank
Ms Peterson and her colleagues. As always, it has been extremely
helpful.
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| The committee adjourned.
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