BURNABY, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - March 9, 2010) - If
local governments opt for public private partnerships (P3s), something which is
under consideration for the Capital Regional District's new sewage treatment,
they are more vulnerable to the restrictions of the Canada-United States
Procurement Agreement (CUPA).
A new legal opinion by Steven
Shrybman of Sack Goldblatt Mitchell says the CUPA contains temporary rules that
will make it difficult for the CRD to achieve environmental protection and local
economic development objectives. Shrybman concludes that the best way to avoid
the CUPA requirements is to go with conventional public procurement rather than
a P3.
"This opinion should give
elected councillors in the CRD cause for serious concern about what they will
be able to achieve as part of the sewage treatment project if they opt for a
P3. The CRD has placed a high priority on things like community economic
development and environmental and resource conservation goals and they should
have the right to pursue these goals," said CUPE BC president Barry O'Neill.
In the 20 page opinion,
Shrybman identifies a number of vulnerabilities for the CRD – including being
prohibited from specifying some portion of local or even Canadian goods,
services and labour and from supporting a market for innovative Canadian
environmental or energy design or Canadian green technologies. He also cautions
that the agreement creates a litigation risk arising from the rights US
companies have under the CUPA to challenge both the method and the terms of
certain CRD procurements.
Shrybman says that the
conventional public approach to procurement offers several important advantages
over a P3 model, allowing the sewage treatment project to avoid being captured
by the CUPA rules.
The Canadian Union of Public
Employees commissioned the opinion from Stephen Shrybman of Sack Goldblatt
Mitchell LLP Lawyers. A backgrounder and the full opinion are available at www.cupe.bc.ca/campaigns/water-watch/reports-research.