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 20 - Evidence
| OTTAWA, Wednesday, September 26, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance met this
day at 5:47 p.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: Honourable senators, this is our fourth and
final public meeting with regard to the reference to the committee
by the Senate to consider the role of government in the financing
of deferred maintenance costs in Canada's post-secondary
institutions. The order of reference was adopted by the Senate on
June 13, 2001, and the committee is to report by October 31 next.
|
| There are two organizations appearing before us tonight: the
Canadian Alliance of Student Associations and the Canada
Foundation for Innovation. We will hear from representatives of
the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations first. We welcome
Mr. Liam Arbuckle, National Director and Mr. Rob South,
Government Relations Coordinator. I invite Mr. Arbuckle to
proceed.
|
| Mr. Liam Arbuckle, National Director, Canadian Alliance
of Student Associations: I thank you for the opportunity to
present to the Standing Senate Committee on National Finance on
the issue of accumulated deferred maintenance costs at universities across the country.
|
| First, I would like to say a word about the organization I
represent, the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations. CASA
is a non-partisan group that represents the interests of 23 university and college student governments to the federal government.
CASA ensures that the interests of over 310,000 students,
represented by our members, are advocated in a manner that
shows professionalism, solid research, clear reasonable thought,
and in a manner that reflects a spirit of cooperation. I believe
these values will be seen in our presentation.
|
| Of course, as with any major issue, it is difficult to look at
deferred maintenance in isolation of the larger environment in
which the problem exists. Today, I will outline for you our
perspective on how so much deferred maintenance was accumulated, why it is a problem for students, and some suggested
courses of action to help alleviate the problem.
|
| Funding for university core operating budgets has been in a
general state of decline across the country for the past two
decades. While this funding is under the jurisdiction and control
of the provinces, we must realize that reductions in federal
transfer payments to the provinces have played a significant role
in the decline.
|
| In 1991, the Government of Canada transferred $2.1 billion to
the provinces to help pay for post-secondary education. This
figure, combined with $6.7 billion for health care and $6.1 billion
for social programming equals $14.9 billion which, in effect, was
what the Canada Health and Social Transfer was at that time. In
the 2000-01 fiscal year, the CHST payments to the provinces
were only $13.5 billion. Thus, in one decade, funding declined by
$1.4 billion, and that is not even taking into account inflation.
Announcements have been made to see increases in future years.
|
| It should be noted there was a $2.8-billion increase in
equalization payments during this time; yet those funds are for
general expenditures in poorer provinces, not for specific social
programs. This decline in funding was largely passed from the
provinces to health, social and post-secondary education pro
grams. Many universities dealt with the cuts in funding or
increases below inflation in two ways: raising tuition and cutting
expenditures.
|
| In cutting expenditures, many universities did three things that
had a profoundly negative impact on students. They cut faculty
size. They increased class size. They cut spending on equipment
and building maintenance.
|
| These cuts played a large part in the formation of the $3.6
billion worth of deferred maintenance described in the recent
report of the Canadian Association of University Business
Officers. Other contributing factors to this problem are an aging
physical plant, a rise in overall costs of universities and enrolment
growth.
|
| However, this $3.6 billion in deferred maintenance is only a
number. It will only be treated as such until we understand what
problems deferred maintenance cause for students across the
country.
|
| The most obvious concern resulting from accumulated deferred
maintenance is safety. Unfortunately, there is no national study on
the physical safety of students and professors at universities
across the country. I would like the committee to know, however,
at least episodically, that there is cause for concern.
|
| In recent years, we have seen buildings condemned at the
University of Saskatchewan during final exams and puddles from
leaky roofs accumulate on the floors of Dalhousie University, last
winter, a ceiling tile fell on a student's head in the middle of a
lecture at McGill University. All these safety problems were
avoidable with proper maintenance.
|
| Next on CASA's list of concerns is the negative impact
deferred maintenance has on the quality of education a university
student receives. Many classrooms are unable to use modern
teaching tools because they have not received the necessary
upgrade in technological infrastructure. The situation is worse in
many labs in which students are expected to experience hands-on
learning. It is not possible to learn modern research techniques if
a laboratory cannot handle the use of modern equipment.
|
| This lack of proper infrastructure in laboratories can also affect
the ability of students to gain meaningful work experience. If a
professor does not have the research space necessary to employ
lab assistants, students will be deprived of valuable resume-
building opportunities.
|
| This lack of ability to conduct proper research has a strong
effect on CASA's next concern about deferred maintenance,
namely, faculty retention. The quality of a student's education and
the strength of a university's reputation are reliant upon the
quality of the faculty at a particular university. Currently, there is
strong international competition for many Canadian professors. If
our research facilities do not match up, we could lose many
quality professors. For example, a well-respected biologist
recently left the University of British Columbia for Stanford
University in the United States because UBC's ventilation system
was in such disrepair that it could not keep the constant
temperature her research required.
|
| Lastly, deferred maintenance is a problem for students because
of the likeliness that these costs will be passed on to students
through increased tuition. Earlier in my presentation I outlined
how transfer funding had decreased over the past decade, while at
the same time tuition increased dramatically. In fact, over the past
decade, the average tuition of an undergraduate arts student
increased 126 per cent. Increases were even greater for many
students in professional programs.
|
| I do not want to dwell on the tuition issue, but I would be
remiss in my duties if I do not make it clear to this committee that
CASA believes there are serious concerns about the affordability
of post-secondary education in this country. I will use two
different statistical examples to illustrate my point.
|
| According to a recent Ipsos-Reid study for Alberta Learning,
44 per cent of recent Alberta high school graduates not attending
a post-secondary institution cited high tuition and mandatory fees
as a reason for not attending.
|
| When tuition at the University of Western Ontario's medical
school jumped from $4,844 in 1998 to $10,000 in 2000, the gross
family income of the parents of an average UWO first-year
medical student rose dramatically. It is now $140,000 per year as
compared with $80,000 just three years ago.
|
| Clearly, students do not want to see any more costs passed on
to them. I believe we must realize there is a danger of the large
bill for accumulated deferred maintenance being passed on to
students. The need for action to prevent costs being passed on to
students is time-sensitive.
|
| I think I have illustrated today that universities do have a
propensity to deal with budget crises by passing on costs to
students. These costs will get a lot higher if the problem of
deferred maintenance is not addressed soon.
|
| The aforementioned CAUBO report states that $1.2 billion of
accumulated deferred maintenance at Canadian universities is
urgent. This means that if action is not taken soon, costs will only
escalate.
|
| An example the University of British Columbia illustrates this
point. In 1997, at the university's Asian Centre a catastrophic
failure of the central ventilation system occurred. It took 12 weeks
to fix the system at a cost of $23,000. Had preventive
maintenance occurred, it would have taken two days at a cost of
$1,500. The question arises as to why this preventive maintenance
did not occur. The answer is both simple and unfortunate. With
approximately $255 million in deferred maintenance, UBC cannot
afford to do all the preventive maintenance it should. Many other
universities across the country are experiencing similar problems.
|
| The sad state of affairs that the physical plants of many
universities are in is an issue that has been on the back burner too
long. It is an issue that has also been identified before. In 1997,
the Senate Special Committee on Post-Secondary Education
recommended the federal government begin negotiations with
the provinces on a joint program to arrest accelerating deterioration of the physical infrastructure in libraries of colleges and
universities.
|
| CASA, like the Senate special committee believes the federal
government has a strong important role in post-secondary
education. Further, we feel that post-secondary education is and
must continue to be a key element in the federal government's
skills and learning agenda, the innovation agenda and the
government's responsibility to ensure a healthy and strong
economy.
|
| To ensure that the physical plants of universities can fulfil this
role we recommend two key actions. First, to address the existing
problem, we recommend the federal government create a
one-time funding envelope of $1.2 billion to address urgent
deferred maintenance. Second, to prevent this problem from
recurring, we recommend the federal government work cooperatively with the provinces to create a funding accord of $1 billion
per year earmarked exclusively for increased post-secondary
education funding.
|
| I know the price tag for these actions seems high, but we must
remember to view education as an investment in our economy,
not as a cost.
|
| I would like you to consider the comments of the Stéphane
Garelli, the director of the internationally respected World
Competitive Project. He said:
|
Knowledge is perhaps the most critical competitiveness factor. As countries move up the economic scale, the more they thrive on knowledge to ensure their prosperity and to compete in world markets. How knowledge is acquired and managed is each nation's responsibility. Indeed, nations do compete.
|
| Mr. Chairman, thank you for the opportunity to present our
thoughts here this evening. I look forward to answering your
questions.
|
| I would like to close my presentation with a quote from
Eric Hoffer's Working and Thinking on the Waterfront:
|
It is the capacity for maintenance which is the best test for the vigor and stamina of a society. Any society can be galvanized for a while to build something, but the will and the skill to keep things in good repair, day in, day out are fairly rare.
|
| Senator Moore: It is good to see Mr. South and Mr. Arbuckle
again. I am pleased to say that Mr. Arbuckle is a graduate of St.
Mary's University, Mr. Chairman.
|
| The Chairman: He is a native of Amherst, Nova Scotia, and
Mr. South is a graduate of the University of Calgary.
|
| Senator Moore: I am interested in the witnesses' remarks. We
have heard some of these comments and figures before from other
witnesses, including CAUBO and AUCC who were here
yesterday. Did the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations,
when it became aware of this situation, make representations to
those groups, urging them to act? How has your organization
dealt with the matter?
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: We are in constant contact with the AUCC,
exchanging ideas. On this issue, we particularly agree on our
similar ideas about the existing problems. That does not
necessarily mean we see the same solutions to those problems, but
we do identify the problems as being common to the universities
and colleges and to the students.
|
| This is the second consecutive year that our national campaign
has included deferred maintenance as a topic.
|
| Senator Moore: Have you expressed your views to those
organizations?
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: We have spoken with the AUCC. To my
knowledge, we have not spoken with CAUBO.
|
| Senator Moore: AUCC suggested to our committee that the
federal government provide funds, which would be disbursed on
the basis of a formula combining provincial population with each
province's full-time equivalent student population. Have you seen
that proposal?
|
| Mr. Rob South, Government Relations Coordinator, Canadian Alliance of Students Associations: I saw that proposal a
few days ago.
|
| Senator Moore: Do you have a response to that or a
preference?
|
| Mr. South: As a member-driven organization, we cannot
comment because our own policy committee has not had a chance
to analyze that. The key point here is that we both see the same
problem and we both see similar, though not identical, courses of
action toward solutions. If we can find a workable solution that
does not create more problems, both organizations would be
happy, regardless of whose solution it is.
|
| Senator Moore: I ask the question because AUCC says that
the number of people using university facilities is a major
contributing factor in the deterioration of those facilities. Going
on the basis of the full-time equivalent student population,
individual universities would achieve more funding than if some
sort of combined figure is used. Do you have any thoughts about
that? Or is that again a policy matter where you cannot comment?
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: It is a policy matter on which we unfortunately
cannot comment without going through the process.
|
| Senator Moore: What about a personal matter like making
donations to universities? There was an article in The Globe and
Mail in August, as well as a report prepared by Statistics Canada
entitled, "The National Survey of Giving, Volunteering and
Participating." The newspaper article indicates that $5 billion was
donated in the past year as charitable donations and that only 3
per cent of that - $152 million - was donated to university and
research facilities.
|
| As we hear from the various witnesses, the question that recurs
is where the money will come from, besides government and
corporations? How do we get individuals more involved? We
know about the tax incentive to give political donations whereby
a portion comes off the taxes you would otherwise be liable to
pay.
|
| Does your organization have any position with respect to
making donations to universities, even if it was earmarked to a
specific reserve fund for maintenance? Do you have any comment
with respect to donations being accorded the same status as a
political donation?
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: I could answer that from a personal view, but I
would, again, need to discuss it as a policy matter.
|
| If such a tax break addresses the problem in a way that is
equitable across the country, then we would like that sort of
policy proposal. It can be worrisome that certain universities and
colleges have a better set-up or infrastructure to deal with
incoming donations. The ability to generate donations for projects
is substantially better at some universities than others.
|
| It is hard to get people to donate in the first place but it is even
more difficult to ask them to help rebuild the Sobey's building, for
example, at St. Mary's University. Donors would rather see their
own names on buildings. The universities themselves would have
to make some attitudinal changes to come up with innovative
ways to present the option of donating to deferred maintenance as
one that would benefit the donor as well as the university.
|
| Senator Moore: We cannot keep going in this cycle. We must
address the problem in a more business-like manner. I am not
suggesting that the business options do not do that now, however,
we should explore other incentives to get people involved. It need
not be alumni. We could involve friends, relatives of those who
went to the university, or concerned citizens within the
community who may have gone there for a cultural or athletic
event. Somehow we must get more than 3 per cent of donations
flowing toward our universities if we believe that universities are
so important to the evolution of our civilized society.
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: Incentives must also be based on the fact that
communities must support themselves and the institutions within
them. Often that is difficult. The city of Halifax has a base
population of 350,000 and has five institutions. That becomes a
problem. I do not know if the solution lies in the direction of
spending time trying to produce more money from donations as it
is in looking for ways for the federal government to be able to
help out in a systematic way on a continual basis.
|
| Senator Stratton: I discovered tonight from our friendly
senator from that part of the world that there are five institutions
in Halifax. That perhaps puts Manitoba, where I am from, in a
little better perspective, as we have two in Winnipeg, with a
population of 650,000.
|
| With $3.6 billion in deferred maintenance, I am rather shocked
that there have been only three occurrences of physical harm
coming to people.
|
| Private fundraising aside for the moment, Manitoba has
embarked on a program of $100 million over five years devoted
strictly to the repair of infrastructure on the three universities and
the two community colleges in the province. Do you have
knowledge of that occurring in other provinces?
|
| I agree it is a bad situation. People who work at the University
of Manitoba in the operations and maintenance department tell
me of whole chunks falling off of brick buildings, which is rather
dangerous. Are you aware of other provinces carrying out such a
program, and if not, why not?
|
| Mr. South: Certain portions of the Superbuild fund in Ontario
are allowed to go to maintenance of existing buildings. Different
provinces would argue that they have chosen different models to
do this. Alberta does not believe in infrastructure programs for
universities. It believes it is the university's responsibility out of
its core operating budgets. However, Alberta recently gave sizable
increases to the operating budgets of its universities, so that
province would argue that the universities are empowered to
make some repairs.
|
| Other provinces do that. The ministry that gets involved would
vary according to the province. In some provinces, a public works
or infrastructure ministry would provide the funding; in other
provinces it would come through the education or post-secondary
ministry. There is funding. However, it will not be enough to
solve the problem at the level it is at right now, but there is some
funding coming in from the provinces, certainly.
|
| The Chairman: We do have the Statistics Canada study that
came out the other day and it relates to the point you have raised.
It points out that in the academic year 1999-2000, the three levels
of government injected almost $1.1 billion more, or 15.1 per cent
more, than they did in the previous academic year.
|
| To the point you raised, it says:
|
The largest increase came from provincial governments, which contributed almost $6.8 billion in 1999-2000, up $800 million or 13.5 per cent from 1998-99. This funding was allocated to capital spending to address deferred maintenance on Canada's aging universities, as well as to expand capacity for future growth in student enrolment and faculty.
|
| A little bit later, the report says that universities in most
provinces allocated more money for infrastructure, that they spent
a total of $430 million on buildings, a 5.7 per cent annual
increase, which followed an 8.3 per cent increase the previous
year.
|
| That being said, the report adds that spending on buildings was
still 17.8 per cent less than it was in 1994-95. In a word, it seems
to me they are starting to play catch-up. There is a long way to
go, as the witnesses have said, but they are starting to play
catch-up and the money is coming, I think, in great part from the
various levels of government, including the feds.
|
| Senator Stratton: This is what I was getting at. Where are the
provinces on this? I happen to be aware of what is happening in
Manitoba, thankfully. What is happening across the balance of the
country I think is critical.
|
| You are requesting the federal government create $1.2-billion
funding to address this urgent problem and then to create a
funding accord of $1 billion per year earmarked exclusively for
increased post-secondary education funding. What does that
mean? Is that across the board? Is it for infrastructure alone?
|
| Mr. South: The funding accord for the $1 billion annually is
for across-the-board funding to deal with a variety of issues that
we see universities facing. Deferred maintenance is one of the
main concerns. In addition, a huge faculty renewal problem will
be coming up in the next few years. Massive enrolment growth is
being faced. Also, education expenses in a number of areas, such
as purchase of books, have so outpaced inflation that they have
come up with an index - called the Education Price Index, the
EPI - to see how fast prices are rising for education. Education
costs are growing at a more rapid rate than inflation.
|
| In coming up with the figure of $1 billion, we looked back to
the year 1991 and there was $2 billion earmarked for post-secondary education. If you take base inflation over that half
decade, it would be approximately 23 to 24 per cent. That would
get you up to $2.5 billion. You must factor in that we have had a
massive enrolment growth over the past decade and also the
growing importance of post-secondary education to the economy.
|
| Finally - and this is one of our key points - the two numbers
that we have used are bookend numbers. However, you will find
1991 to 2001 obviously was a period of cuts when the system was
switched over from three separate funds to the CHST, which the
finance department talked to this committee about earlier. When
those cuts came, all three social areas were affected: general
social programs, post-secondary education, and health care. When
the government started to reinvest, we found - and it is hard to
prove the numbers - that the vast majority of this reinvestment
went directly back to health care and did not go back to areas
such as social programs and post-secondary education.
|
| The Chairman: That is the way it works. You understand the
block-funding concept.
|
| Mr. South: Yes, we understand the block-funding concept. We
are not entirely happy with the block-funding concept.
|
| The Chairman: No. You will agree that your complaint on that
score is to the provincial governments and not to the federal
government?
|
| Mr. South: We agree that it is to the provincial governments,
but we also agree that there must be an adequate level of transfers
from the federal government. It helps if there are numbers to
which the provinces must be held accountable, so that one can do
comparisons across provinces, et cetera.
|
| If funding is earmarked for specific funds in each province, you
can see by how much each province will top up its own spending,
et cetera. Comparisons and accountability for funding would be
much easier, because everything is more visible to the average
citizen and to university students.
|
| The Chairman: How would you operate the funding envelope
of $1.2 billion to address urgent deferred maintenance? Would
that money go from the federal government to the provinces and
then to the universities?
|
| Mr. South: We believe there would have to be negotiations
between the federal government and the provinces, otherwise it
would cause jurisdictional issues. There could not be a direct
federal to university transfer there.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you both. We appreciate your presence
and your help to this committee on this matter.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: Witnesses have told us that
universities are in such dire straits that the quality of the courses
offered is compromised. Today, we were told that an eminent
researcher had left a Canadian university for one in the United
States because the ventilation in his work area was inadequate. I
believe you stated as much in your report.
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: That is correct.
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: University education is very import
ant to a nation as a whole and we must remain competitive
internationally. Universities represent an investment in our future
and we have to preserve this part of our heritage.
|
| With respect to infrastructure, the very essence of this bill, you
put forward two recommendations, one being to urge the federal
government to provide one-time funding. We could call upon the
government to establish a national university infrastructure
program which would give every university an opportunity to
assess its needs and to request funding to restore its infrastructure.
|
| Not all universities are experiencing the same problems and
costs are not identical in all cases. If a federal infrastructure
program were in place, one to which all Canadian universities had
access, then each province could request funding for respective
programs. Would you not agree?
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Mr. Arbuckle, have you a comment on that
intervention?
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: It sounds good, but our proposal is that we
address immediately the outlined urgency of the $1.2 billion in a
one-time envelope. This is a very big problem, and we must come
up with mechanisms to deal with it continually. However, the
one-time funding would help resolve the current problems as
quickly as possible; then, through another mechanism, which is
increasing $1 billion per year for core budgets that universities
could take care of at their assessed pace.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: Let us hope that these grants will help
these universities turn the corner once and for all. They have been
neglected for far too long already. We need to think about setting
up a program that will guard against this happening again.
|
| Once there was an infrastructure program in place that handed
out money right and left to universities. This particular problem is
unique to universities. Too much time is allowed to go by because
the machinery of government moves far too slowly. We need to
see what can be done to reduce waiting times with a view to
resolving the situation.
|
| [English]
|
| Mr. Arbuckle: It has reached the point now that I think even
universities and colleges realize they cannot put it off any longer.
It has reached the point where things are falling on people.
|
| When the cuts to program funding occurred, it was dealt with
by simply putting things off to a later date. That was the only
solution - to take care of things in a couple of years. There are
many universities, such as Dalhousie in Halifax, that can no
longer do that. There are actually puddles in some of the hallways
of the university.
|
| If it is more than a one-year funding program - a one-time
funding mechanism, perhaps - how long would the negotiation
process be between the federal and provincial governments to
come up with such a specific, general federal program? That
would take a long time to accomplish. We suggest that a one-time
envelope to cover these deferred maintenance costs that are
considered urgent would resolve things more quickly than if it
were dependent upon negotiations between the federal and
provincial governments.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: In your presentation, you stated that
in 1997, a Special Senate Committee on Post-Secondary
Education recommended the federal government negotiate with
the provinces to establish a joint program to prevent the
deterioration of university library infrastructure. What has
happened since these recommendations were first made?
|
| The Chairman: Indeed, a special Senate committee chaired by
our former colleague Senator Bonnell issued a series of
recommendations.
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: We need to think of a more effective
way of helping our universities. We need more and more educated
people because the competition is incredible. Universities are
extremely important institutions. Where do matters stand today,
further to the 1997 recommendation?
|
| The Chairman: This is neither the first time, nor will it be the
last time, that the government has failed to follow through on a
recommendation issued by a parliamentary committee.
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: If the government has turned a deaf
ear to...
|
| The Chairman: The committee is looking into this problem,
because the situation has deteriorated markedly since 1997.
|
| [English]
|
| Many thanks, Mr. Arbuckle and Mr. South.
|
| I now call to the table Mr. David W. Strangway, President and
CEO of the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
|
| Honourable senators, you will know that the Canada Foundation for Innovation was established in 1997 to invest in research
infrastructure projects and is projected to exist until the year 2010.
It has so far provided $3.15 billion in funding to projects.
|
| Mr. Strangway, we appreciate your willingness to appear here
on rather short notice, the more so as you have this afternoon
appeared before the Finance Committee of the House of
Commons. I do not know whether you are in double jeopardy or
whether this amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.
|
| Here you are before the Senate committee. I hope you will find
your experience at least as pleasant as before the House of
Commons committee. I hope you will be able to help us with the
problem with which we are concerned.
|
| Please proceed, Mr. Strangway.
|
| Mr. David W. Strangway, President and CEO, Canada
Foundation for Innovation: Mr. Chairman, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, or CFI, is mandated explicitly to support
capital infrastructure in the research area. Basically, that means
before proposals are submitted to us by universities and
institutions, they talk first about what research they plan to do,
what their needs are and then they apply to us.
|
| We require them to submit a plan as to where they are planning
to conduct their research over the next few years because we are
making very substantial investments in these institutions. We need
them to tell us where they want to go. They must then apply to us
and demonstrate that they have the quality in the proposal that is
required.
|
| At this point, as you said, Mr. Chairman, we have received a
total of $3.15 billion from the federal government over a period
starting in 1997; the last amount was delivered to us toward the
end of June so that it can be counted in the last fiscal year. On a
slight aside, that was probably the most interesting experience that
I shall ever have because I picked up a piece of paper from the
government that said "125" and then a whole lot of zeroes after it.
I had never seen anything like that and I probably will not see
anything like it again.
|
| The Chairman: This is the wrong committee to be telling that
story, sir. We are the counterpart of the Public Accounts
Committee. We deal with the Estimates.
|
| Mr. Strangway: I understand that. This was a fascinating thing
because that was the 10-year funding for the rest of the decade.
|
| We support 40 per cent of the cost of a project that is approved
by us. The institutions are under obligation to support the
remaining 60 per cent. It is important to realize that the federal
government does not have a partnership with the provinces in this
activity; nor does the CFI have a partnership with the provinces.
We support directly the universities in their applications and
needs. They then must go and find the matching funds, the
remaining 60 per cent.
|
| So far, in most cases, they are finding a further 40 per cent
from the provincial governments, but it is crucial to note that that
is not a formal partnership. It is a strictly informal partnership and
it depends on the success of the university presidents who are
effective lobbyists. They will find the remaining 20 per cent
largely from the private sector or from voluntary organizations. If
it is health research area, they might work with the Heart and
Stroke Foundation.
|
| That is the pattern. At the present time, we have allocated or
awarded more than $900 million out of the total of $3.15 billion,
and that continues. You should also be aware that the $3.15
billion is in investments. Thus, by 2010, when the fund goes to
zero, we will have committed a total of about $4 billion, given the
interest that will accumulate. It is a massive program.
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| It is aimed entirely at the facilities that researchers need. When
the proposals come to us, they are built upon either the excellence
that is there or the reason they need this facility in order to
achieve research excellence.
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| You are addressing the question of deferred maintenance.
Deferred maintenance is not part of our mandate in any direct
sense. There are occasions in which a proposal will come forward
to us in which we say, "You tell us about the exciting research
you plan to do and then tell us what the missing elements are. If it
is a capital element, we might be able to deal with that." In that
sense, we have done some things with respect to buildings.
|
| However, there are always buildings or renovations of
buildings always driven by the research they plan to do. If
someone comes and says, as they did in one case, "We have a
good group. We have a leaking roof and we need a new building
to replace all of this," that dos not fit our mandate. We may be
helping slightly with the deferred maintenance problem, but
fundamentally we are not mandated to do so.
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| Mr. Chairman, some honourable senators may realize that I
spent nearly 13 years as a university president. Thus, it is
inevitable in taking off my CFI hat for a moment that I might
make some comments about the question of deferred maintenance.
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| The Chairman: Please do.
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| Mr. Strangway: The deferred maintenance question is very
profound and fundamental. As a result of my 12 years or so as
President of the University of British Columbia, I would like to
draw a couple of things to your attention.
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| The first is the terms of the transfer payments from the
province to the university on a per-student basis. We lost 30 per
cent of the funding in that 10-year period. That is in constant
dollars, of course, but those were very serious belt-tightening
exercises.
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| The Chairman: What is the 10-year period?
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| Mr. Strangway: I finished in 1997 and I started in 1985, so it
is in recent memory. I do not think much has changed for them in
the meantime.
|
| When one is taking 30 per cent hits, it is not much different
than what the federal agencies went through in terms of program
review. I do not think there was anything unusual about the
University of British Columbia. I think you will find this was a
universal problem.
|
| Faced with the issue of whether to replace the roof or to fire the
faculty members, choices must be made. In the face of increasing
student demand, you do not fire faculty members. They are the
ones who deliver what the university is all about. We did not hire
as many as faculty members as we would have if the deferred
maintenance problem did not exist.
|
| I like to characterize the deferred maintenance problem in a
simple way. UBC, when I was president, had 20 acres of roof.
Vancouver has a rainy climate. The average lifetime of a roof
there is 20 years. Divide one by the other, one acre of roof should
be replaced every year just to keep up. Instead we said that if the
roof was not leaking, we would not replace it. When 15 or 20
years have gone by and all 20 acres start leaking at once, we are
facing deep budget cuts.
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| That is the deferred maintenance problem in terms of a roof,
but hundreds of other items are affected. Many temporary
buildings on campuses were meant to last about 20 years - not a
lifetime.
|
| I have enormous sympathy and understanding regarding the
deferred maintenance problem. You will find similarities in
hospitals and colleges, but the sector I know is the university
sector.
|
| It is not an issue that CFI is mandated to deal with because we
drive everything by the quality and the nature and the plans for
the research.
|
| The Chairman: We appreciate your testimony both as head of
CFI and, in particular, your fairly recent experience as a university
president.
|
| Senator Stratton: So you have $4 billion over 10 years for
research primarily?
|
| Mr. Strangway: It is for the capital cost of research facilities
and equipment. It is not for the performance of research.
|
| Senator Stratton: I understand. Would you give dollars to
build new buildings?
|
| Mr. Strangway: We have given dollars to build new buildings
where that was the missing element that was preventing
outstanding research. We have done a fair number of renovation
projects as well.
|
| Senator Stratton: I can appreciate the need to change a
building's function in order to allow research to take place.
|
| I recall the construction boom in the 1970s at university
campuses. I am from Manitoba and I recall the University of
Manitoba undertaking huge construction. Of course, 25 years
later, as you say, the costs catch up and the acres of roof start
leaking. Huge infrastructure problems arise. Will we now, with
this innovation fund, create the same problem for 20 years from
now? Are we building in another long-term problem by the very
fact of your work? I do not deny your work is needed.
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| Mr. Strangway: We may be building in long-term problems in
more arenas than this one. Look at the world of high-performance
computing. Many investments are being made there to allow
people to use modern techniques to hook into the optical
backbone across the country. In that field, the deterioration rate is
five years, rather than 15 or 20 years. Somewhere down the road,
people will need to look at that set of questions. Probably the
proposals that we see five or six years from now will still be for
first-rate research but it will include the replacement of outdated
equipment. That is not a deferred maintenance problem, but it is a
similar problem. Different parts of this deterioration have different
time scales.
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| Senator Stratton: In this day and age, you can consider that an
infrastructure problem?
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| Mr. Strangway: In the way we are dealing with it, it is an
infrastructure problem, yes.
|
| Senator Moore: You mentioned you provide funding for
research, capital infrastructure and equipment. So you provide
funds for new buildings, some renovations and for lab equipment.
Is that correct?
|
| Mr. Strangway: Yes, the researchers must tell us about the
frontier research they plan to do. Then they must show what is
missing in order to achieve that. They must demonstrate that they,
in principle, can raise the matching funds, and, if the project is
established, that they have the capacity to operate it and use it
over time. The short answer is yes.
|
| Senator Moore: When universities make their application to
CFI, and your organization approves the funding, is any part of
the funding set aside as a reserve for ongoing maintenance? Most
buildings have a lifespan of 35 years. Is that taken into
consideration? This is similar to what Senator Stratton was
asking.
|
| Mr. Strangway: Ongoing maintenance is not included in the
proposals, but we do ask if they have thought about that question
themselves.
|
| Senator Moore: One of the reasons we ended up here is that
previous business plans did not look ahead. It is one thing to put
in a new window, but if it gets broken you must have the
wherewithal to repair it. This would be the recipients' responsibility?
|
| Mr. Strangway: CFI has one fund that was incrementally
given to us as part of the increase; there is $400 million set aside
for the use and operation of that infrastructure. This new fund is
not retroactive. When a new proposal is funded, we help with up
to 30 per cent of the cost of the capital to assist with the
operation. A piece of equipment will likely require a technician or
a support person. This is, in many ways, an indirect cost question.
|
| Senator Moore: We have heard that referenced here as an
indirect cost. That seems to cover many things.
|
| Mr. Strangway: That umbrella covers a lot of things but there
are many needs.
|
| Senator Moore: With respect to sources of funds from private
foundations, the culture there seems to be to provide funds for
new projects as opposed to fix-up. In your tenure as UBC
president, were you able to get foundations to realize the
importance of the maintenance of buildings and to provide some
incentive for them to consider and to provide funds for such
projects?
|
| Mr. Strangway: There were discussions of that kind, but that
is not terribly attractive to donors. I think, increasingly, buildings
are less attractive to donors than they used to be. What is much
more attractive is scholarship support and support for endowed
chairs. In my time at UBC, we raised $270 million. It was the
largest campaign in Canadian history. Some that money went into
buildings, including a new library, but most of it went into the
endowment funds. We created 80 endowed chairs as a result of
that campaign so we were able to hire 80 faculty members we
could not have otherwise hired.
|
| Much of the money went into endowments for scholarship
funds for graduate students, or for students from across the
country. We are seeing in the private-giving area a lot more
interest in chairs and students than in the bricks and mortar.
Bricks and mortar are a tougher sell. We did get quite a bit in
bricks and mortar but it would not be as easy today.
|
| Senator Moore: In terms of individual donations, do you think
people would have more of an incentive to give if their donations
and the charitable receipts given for them were treated in the
same manner as political donations in that the amount would
come off the taxes one would be liable to pay as opposed to a
business donation?
|
| Mr. Strangway: Most of the universities have charitable
receipting capacity. They can give lots of tax breaks and so on.
The tax break is a necessary condition but it is not the driving
force. People want to do something good and they want to do
something for the institution.
|
| Many times we have had to argue with people and say, "Here is
something we want to put your name on." They say, "I do not
want my name on it." We say, "Please, we want your name on it
because we want to honour you for what you have done."
|
| The Chairman: Chances are you could broaden the base of
your donors - although I am not suggesting that it needs to be
done, as Senator Moore appears to be doing - if you could offer
the kind of tax credit that is provided for political donations.
|
| Mr. Strangway: This was not an issue for us particularly
because we had a foundation that has Agent of the Crown status.
We could manage through an Agent of the Crown. I do not know
if that is universal across the country, but certainly we had that
capacity at the University of British Columbia. I think a number
of other jurisdictions have entertained an Agent of the Crown
status.
|
| The Chairman: I believe you are the first former university
president we have had with us. Were you in office when the
university business officers did their research?
|
| Mr. Strangway: I was not. That report came out about a year
or six months ago. I was not in office, but certainly was very
much aware of it. We had done that analysis in my time at UBC.
|
| The Chairman: The national number they say is $3.6 billion.
How serious a problem is deferred maintenance at UBC as we
speak?
|
| Mr. Strangway: There are many different ways of trying to get
at that question. One of the ways we did it was to ask what would
be the replacement value is of the physical structure of the
campus. We came close to a number in the billion-dollar range. If
everything were levelled by an earthquake and we had to start
from scratch, we would be looking at somewhere in the range
of $1 billion.
|
| People who work in the field of upgrading, maintaining and
keeping buildings whole and hearty and sound will say we should
be spending 10 per cent, 15 per cent or even 20 per cent a
year. The deferred maintenance problem is an accumulated
amount, but if one really had the capacity to properly manage an
institution like UBC, one would be looking at expending between
$100 million and $150 million per year in doing that.
|
| If we put deferred maintenance on that, with five years' worth
of catch-up, and multiply that through, $500 to $700 million
would have gone a long way toward getting us back into the
catch-up problem. As people have said, there is also the ongoing
problem. That is just one institution. It is one of the very big
institutions.
|
| The Chairman: You spoke of the metaphorical roof, the
choice you had between fixing the roof or firing, you thought,
20 professors, during those lean years. What did your staff load
look like during those 10 years? Did you actually reduce faculty?
|
| Mr. Strangway: We did not reduce faculty much but we
changed the student-faculty ratio substantially.
|
| The Chairman: You increased class sizes.
|
| Mr. Strangway: Public institutions in Canada, let us say 10 or
15 years ago, might have had a student-faculty ratio in the global
sense of perhaps 15 to one. I am pretty sure that by the time I left,
we had managed to drive that up to about 21 or 22 to one. The
great universities south of the border will always have a
student-faculty ratio of eight to one or ten to one.
|
| The Chairman: In terms of trying to absorb the cut-backs, the
reduction in revenues from government, it was maintenance that
took the hit?
|
| Mr. Strangway: There is no question it was maintenance that
took the hit.
|
| The Chairman: It was not the faculty.
|
| Mr. Strangway: It was not today's crisis, but the faculty also
took the hit in the sense that the workloads of the faculty went up
substantially. We did not reduce staff, but student numbers grew
immensely. The workload went up.
|
| The Chairman: What did your wage bill look like over the
period? Did it increase by much?
|
| Mr. Strangway: There were increases during the time. In the
first years I was president we had just come out of the very deep
cuts that had been instituted suddenly. Talking about 1 per cent
sounded like an enormous, great success. Later on the salary
budget grew somewhat, but not very much. It certainly grew less
than inflation for much of that time.
|
| The Chairman: That is the information I was looking for.
|
| Mr. Strangway: I must relate one anecdote about the transfer
payments. Some of you will remember a former finance minister
in B.C. by the name of Mel Couvelier. One day, as we were
chatting and walking down the hall, he said, "Mr. President, you
must be really upset that the feds are beginning to reduce the rate
of increase of the transfer payments." My answer to him was very
simple: "Mr. Minister, you never gave it to me on the way up;
why are you going to take it away on the way down?"
|
| There was never any connection in those days. Later, of course,
when it did start to go down seriously, it was, "Why are the feds
cutting back education and health? That is their fault."
|
| I always felt I was caught in that debate, but my cheque
fundamentally came from Mr. Couvelier and his successors.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you for coming, Mr. Strangway. It has
been very helpful and extremely informative to have you here as
head of the CFI and as a former president of UBC. I hope we will
have an opportunity another time for a discussion in more depth
and detail on the work you are doing.
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| The committee adjourned.
|