Canadian Construction Association COO Conference Presentation on Lobbying - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Canadian Construction Association COO Conference Presentation on Lobbying

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Municipal (City of Toronto?) September 18, 2004. CCA Presentation. 3 ... City of Ottawa example of potential infrastructure funding. GST exemption generates $12 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Canadian Construction Association COO Conference Presentation on Lobbying


1
Canadian Construction AssociationCOO Conference
Presentation onLobbying
  • Tony Stikeman, President
  • TACTIX
  • Government Consulting Inc.

2
Lobbyingwhat is it?
  • Lobbying is part of government life
  • Government relies on lobbying for
  • Policy direction
  • Policy feedback
  • Gauge public opinion
  • And like most industries, lobbying is regulated
  • Federal (Lobbyists Registration Act)
  • Provincial (B.C., Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia)
  • Municipal (City of Toronto?)

3
Federal Lobbying
Business Associations
Government of Canada
Public
NGOs
Cabinet
Special Interests
Parliament
4
Who Lobbies?
  • Associations
  • Private/Public Companies
  • Unions
  • Non-governmental Organizations
  • Governments
  • Aboriginal Peoples
  • Professions
  • Individuals

5
Who is Lobbied?
  • Executive
  • Prime Ministers/Cabinet
  • Premiers/Cabinet
  • Mayors
  • Legislators
  • Members of Parliament
  • Members of Provincial Legislatures
  • Members of City Council
  • Administration / bureaucracy

6
Evolution of Lobbying Industry
  • Not just lunches
  • Who you know and who knows you
  • Ultra importance of personal relationships
  • Growing level of sophistication
  • Consulting services
  • Policy advice
  • Communications services
  • Preparation of materials
  • Delivery to target audiences
  • Aimed at all levels of government

7
Lobbying a Minority Parliament
  • Power shifts to Legislature
  • Votes become important
  • Individual MP more influential
  • Vote brokering important
  • Government cannot rely on single-party majority
    to push through initiatives
  • More diffused decision-making
  • Ministers/Cabinet
  • Parliamentary Committees
  • Senior officials
  • Greater need for MP outreach

8
Minority Parliament
Majority Power Hierarchy
Minority Power Hierarchy
Cabinet
Cabinet
Bureaucracy
Parliamentarians
Parliamentarians
Bureaucracy
9
Federal Opportunities for Construction Industry
  • Cities Agenda
  • Infrastructure key priority (Budget 2004 7
    billion GST exemption over 10 years)
  • Transportation
  • Transit, roads, highways, bridges
  • National Highway Program?
  • Environment
  • Water and sewer
  • Contaminated sites remediation
  • Public Works
  • Government buildings
  • Aboriginal hospitals

10
Federal Opportunities for Construction Industry
  • Infrastructure promises in campaign 04
  • - New Deal 4 5 billion for cities and
    communities (gas tax)
  • 1 1.5 billion for assisted housing
  • 2 billion p.a. gas tax allocation (5 cpl in 5
    years)
  • Existing infrastructure programs
  • - Canada Strategic Infrastructure Fund
  • - Municipal Rural Infrastructure Fund
  • - Green Municipal Funds
  • Budget 2005
  • - Employment Insurance Reform
  • - Additional funding for Infrastructure
    development

11
Provincial Opportunities for Construction Industry
  • Private Public Partnerships
  • Additional funding for Infrastructure development
  • Transportation
  • Highways
  • Environment
  • Water Treatment
  • Health care
  • Hospitals
  • Public Works
  • Big city redevelopment

12
Municipal
  • Power of executive varies
  • Mayor can be more than just one vote
  • Mayor is Chairman and CEO
  • Council is usually fragmented
  • Single issue focus
  • Local interests dominate
  • Generally reactive, followers
  • Staff is key
  • Bureaucracy is continuous, institutional memory,
    researched
  • Tendering process well managed (standing offers)

13
Municipal Opportunities for Construction Industry
  • Public-Private Partnerships
  • Power of unions can dissuade Council
  • Infrastructure
  • Transportation
  • Roads
  • Environment
  • Sewers
  • Water Treatment
  • Public Transportation
  • Housing, nursing homes, etc.

14
Municipal Opportunities for Construction Industry
  • Infrastructure Funding
  • Push three levels of government
  • Allocate funds to capital projects, not operating
    costs or lower taxes
  • Entrench notion of capital deficit (FCM estimate
    of 60 billion)
  • City of Ottawa example of potential
    infrastructure funding
  • GST exemption generates 12
  • Federal gas tax allocation (2 cents) 30
  • Provincial gas tax allocation (2 cents) 30
  • Total annual 72 Million

15
Approaching Government
  • Top down and Bottom up strategies
  • Federal / Provincial
  • Executive (Prime Minister and Cabinet)
  • Legislators
  • Bureaucracy
  • Municipal
  • Mayors
  • Councillors
  • Bureaucracy

16
Lobbying Techniques
  • Grass roots
  • - climate change / alternative fuels (wind, fuel
    cells, hydrogen)
  • Single constituency hybrid
  • - ethanol, insurance
  • Single constituency corporate
  • - bank mergers
  • Business coalitions
  • - infrastructure funding, CEPA review,
    telecommunications, Kyoto

17
Strategies for Success
  • SWOT analysis
  • - understanding your assets and liabilities
  • Perception audits
  • - doing your market research on awareness,
    attitudes and knowledge
  • Capturing governments attention
  • - what it takes to get government to pay
    attention - and act
  • Positioning the industry
  • - part of problem or solution? Potential for
    win-win?

18
Strategies for Success
  • Inserting the construction industry into
    governments agenda
  • - becoming part of governments priorities (no
    matter how large or grandiose)
  • Coalitions
  • - building strength through numbers and shared
    interests
  • Execution
  • - no substitute for planning, follow through,
    adapting, eye on ball
  • Minority Parliaments
  • - leveraging Opposition parties and government
    MPs
  • Navigating through red tape and regulatory
    quagmires
  • - P3 patience, persistence and push
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