Meanwhile, 'building in wiring for execution...'
A major projects blueprint
The first signal in that shift came with Bill C-5 – also known as the “One Canadian Economy Act” –
which passed just before the House rose for summer. The legislation, voted on in two parts, is designed to break down interprovincial trade barriers and set out how a shortlist of nation-building projects will be chosen and fast-tracked. (Think: highways, railways, ports, airports, oil pipelines, critical minerals, mines, nuclear facilities or power grids.)
The legislation lays out a blueprint for doing government differently. It aims to build in new wiring for execution, forcing bureaucrats to focus on delivery, not just compliance.
The goal is to force departments out of their silos with internal trade review; speed up project reviews, cutting decision timelines from five years to two, and introduce a “one project, one review” model to streamline assessments. Projects deemed in the national interest would be fast-tracked – marking a clear shift from box-ticking compliance to faster delivery and economic growth.
It also creates a major projects office, a single federal point of contact to help priority projects through assessment and permitting.
The government is also starting to get the people in place to implement that plan. On the same day the bill passed, Carney
shuffled his senior ranks — a first wave of appointments seen as an early step in retooling the leadership to drive his top priorities. With Michael Sabia set to become Clerk of the Privy Council on July 7, more moves are widely expected.
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney isn’t pitching a sweeping public service overhaul — but his government is nudging changes to how Ottawa works. The passage of his signature major projects bill, a wave of senior leadership moves, and a new risk policy all point to a system being quietly...
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