LATEST NEWS
Sewer & Watermain | Roadbuilding | Water & Wastewater | O H & S
September 22, 2008
Ontario General Contractors Association
OGCA urges Infrastructure Ontario to “meet its full mandate”
Infrastructure Ontario needs to expand its expand its horizons and undertake projects outside of the healthcare sphere, says Ontario General Contractors Association president (OGCA) Clive Thurston.
“Recent efforts have focused mainly on the health sector, hospitals in particular,” he told the provincial government’s standing committee on government agencies. “Nevertheless, infrastructure is more than just hospitals or buildings.
“What good are such structures if we cannot depend on the roads and bridges to reach them? “How can they operate if the water and wastewater treatment systems break down or cannot handle new expansions?
“It is clear that the same efforts that have been made to bring the hospital sector up must be applied to highways, roads, bridges and water and wastewater systems.”
Thurston, who was speaking on behalf of five other provincial trade associations, said the time has come for Infrastructure Ontario to “expand and meet its full mandate” of delivering major infrastructure projects for the provincial government.
He said the Crown corporation should engage organizations such as the Ontario Road Builders’ Association (ORBA), the Ontario Sewer and Watermain Construction Association (OSWCA) and the Residential and Civil Construction Alliance of Ontario.
“Infrastructure Ontario needs to focus on three main building blocks — roads, sewer and watermain projects and hospitals.”
Thurston, who made a joint presentation with Ottawa Construction Association chair Mike Sharp, briefed the committee on other items of concern to the province’s design and construction industry.
These include: potential bundling of projects; the need for an “open and transparent” system of financial accountability; and support for “new and better” says of procuring consultant services such as qualifications-based selection.
Clive Thurston
Thurston said projects also need to be planned and rolled out in concert with the industry “to ensure a realistic setting of schedules and budgets and provide for effective management of resources.”
Prior to the presentation, Thurston contacted the Ontario Association of Architects and Consulting Engineers of Ontario (CEO) for input in addition to ORBA, OSWCA and the RCCAO.
CEO president John Gamble who attended the meeting, said it was “unfortunate” that other industry stakeholders had not been invited to appear before the committee, which is reviewing IO operations.
“They are the actual implementers of Infrastructure Ontario’s vision and have a lot to contribute,” he said.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- How to suspend a 13-storey tower over a century-old four-storey structure
- Steel hurdles for Aga Khan Museum build
- Bidding closes for Toronto 2015 Pan Am games venues
- Benson Steel faces transport challenge on Toronto Yorkdale Mall construction project
- York Region, Ontario approves subway construction expenditures
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 239 projects with a total value of $1,872,783,897 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Tuesday.
$59,000,000 Milton ON Prebid
$50,000,000 Metro Toronto Reg ON Tenders
$49,375,000 Toronto ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Retired Canadian Army Gen. Hillier addresses Ontario Road Builders’ Association
- Glass installation continues on Paint Box condos in Toronto
- PCL program aims to nurture the future
- Worrall receives Hamilton-Halton Construction Association young leader award
- Ontario court finds privilege clause in tender permits bypass of lowest bidder
- SNC-Lavalin Nuclear awarded Romanian contract
- Ontario Place to close, future to be determined by John Tory panel review
- British Columbia lines up Aboriginal learners with jobs
- Bidding closes for Toronto 2015 Pan Am games venues
- North Vancouver condos are First Place
- $2 billion oilsands expansion gets the green light
- Whistler asphalt plant operator wins court battle
- Research council's web wind tool helps with roof design
- Exploring the Canadian identity
- Immigration stream would be welcome
- Saskatchewan mayors want cash
- Yukon's first LEED structure earns its certification
- Co-operation planned on codes and standards
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Canada’s labour market flat in January but U.S. on a roll (February 3, 2012)
- Canada’s leading indicator series continued to charge ahead in December (January 23, 2012)
- 2012 holds promise but there’s no denying the uncertainty (part 2) (January 12, 2012)
- More








