It was a big year for construction in Ontario, but arguably the most prominent story for the industry was the passage of Bill 142, the 麻豆传媒高清ion Lien Amendment Act, 2017, which achieved royal assent in the legislature earlier this month.
The bill modernizes the 麻豆传媒高清ion Lien Act, introduces a prompt payment regime and a dispute resolution process.
Clive Thurston, president of the Ontario General Contractors Association, said it deserves to be the top story for the second year in a row because the industry worked together and succeeded.
鈥淭he difference this year is that it鈥檚 a reality and the 87 to 0 vote in the house I think speaks to how the industry continued to work together to make this a reality, sometimes separately, but always in the same direction,鈥 he explained.
鈥淣ow the hard work starts. There is a very short time period to get the regulations done and they鈥檝e got to be right or we risk endangering what we鈥檝e achieved.鈥
Ian Cunningham, president of the Council of Ontario 麻豆传媒高清ion Associations (COCA), said the association has been pursuing reform for more than 25 years.
鈥淭he army of COCA volunteers who met with their local MPPs at their constituency offices and who participated year-after-year in our unrelenting lobbying events at Queen鈥檚 Park, it paid off in spades,鈥 said Cunningham.
For me the number one issue is safety and prevention of injuries and health exposures and deaths
鈥 Patrick Dillon
Provincial Building and 麻豆传媒高清ion Trades Council of Ontario
A prominent issue for the Progressive Contractors Association of Canada (PCA) was the continued growth of 鈥渃onstruction labour monopolies,鈥 specifically in the Region of Waterloo where a construction employer designation on ICI projects has found scope creep in the civil world, stated Karen Renkema, senior manager of public affairs for the PCA. She also pointed to the recent resolution by Sault Ste. Marie Council to seek non-construction employer status.
鈥淗opefully the tables have turned now and this is the way municipalities start looking at this issue in 2018 as its time for us to try and figure out how we can get out of these handcuffs and be able to do a lot more infrastructure,鈥 she said.
PCA is also looking forward to furthering the discussion on a workplace that respects the dignity of the human being, said Renkema, adding there was much needed dialogue on the issue in 2017.
Diversity is also a priority for the Provincial Building and 麻豆传媒高清ion Trades Council of Ontario, said its business manager Patrick Dillon.
鈥淎t our convention, we passed a number of resolutions dealing with safety and training and there is going to be a real focus going forward on the diversity side,鈥 said Dillon.
Health and safety also remains a top priority for many of the associations.
鈥淔or me the number one issue is safety and prevention of injuries and health exposures and deaths in the workplace. That continues to be an ongoing struggle. I have to sadly say that we鈥檙e not winning the game at all,鈥 said Dillon.
鈥淧art of the problem in my opinion is to see how the lives of workers are devalued in comparison to the lives of ordinary citizens. Until government and business and the justice system recognizes that, I think we continue along this trail of pretension prevention.鈥
Andy Manahan, executive director for the Residential and Civil 麻豆传媒高清ion Alliance of Ontario (RCCAO), said Premier Kathleen Wynne delivered some disappointing news in early 2017 when she announced the province would not allow the City of Toronto to move forward with putting tolls on the Gardiner Expressway and Don Valley Parkway, a revenue tool proposed by Mayor John Tory.
鈥淧remier Wynne has talked a really good line about we need new revenue streams but I think she really has solidified a reputation to reject requests from the municipal sector to pay for infrastructure,鈥 said Manahan. 鈥淢unicipalities want greater autonomy to try and build up new sources of revenue to pay for infrastructure but they keep on getting batted down by the province.鈥
The RCCAO also filed a joint application for municipal class environmental assessment (EA) reform which was successful.
鈥淲e did get something in writing in the spring from the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change saying we will have a review of the EA legislation and we will be done by December 2018, so to me that was a significant move,鈥 Manahan explained.
鈥淪ome of the reform we鈥檙e talking about is how do we go through the process quicker. If we don鈥檛 go through that faster, some of that so-called stimulus money the government wants to provide is not going to be injected into the economy in time.鈥
The fact Canada Infrastructure Bank legislation was passed is another milestone in 2017 for the RCCAO.
鈥淭he thing that we like about it is there will be an ability to accept unsolicited bids from the private sector,鈥 he said. 鈥淩ight now the process is Queens Park, through its various treasury boards and cabinet committees, will come up with a list of projects that are then sent to Infrastructure Ontario but that kind of prevents innovative projects from coming forward.鈥
Richard Lyall, president of the Residential 麻豆传媒高清ion Council of Ontario (RESCON) and chair of the 麻豆传媒高清ion and Design Alliance of Ontario, said one of the big themes this year was efficiency in the approvals process.
鈥淲e have all our leaders talking about we need to be globally competitive. You鈥檙e not going to attract international investment here in real terms unless you鈥檝e got an adequate supply of reasonably affordable housing and we don鈥檛 because of the massive amounts of red tape and inefficiency in the development approvals process,鈥 Lyall commented.
He suggested the industry needs technological advancement to be competitive internationally.
鈥淎t RESCON, what we鈥檙e talking about is a very sophisticated BIM platform, cloud sourced, open software system where all of the players in the approvals process can be linked into a particular project鈥verything is handled electronically, everything is tracked,鈥 Lyall explained.
David Caplan, COO of the Ontario Road Builders鈥 Association (ORBA), said the top three issues the association faced in 2017 were the auditor general鈥檚 report criticizing road construction and premature pavement cracking, the amalgamation of ORBA and the Ontario Hot Mix Producers Association, and the transition to an almost entirely new ORBA team.
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