LATEST NEWS
June 18, 2008
Canadian Construction Association Board Meeting
CCA gives conditional support to federal Contract Payment Reporting System
The federal Contract Payment Reporting System (CPRS) has once again received the conditional support of the Canadian Construction Association.
CCA’s finance committee agreed at its recent board meeting in Toronto that continued support of CPRS is a means to ensuring a level playing field in the industry.
“We would like to maintain the status quo for support,” said John Schubert, of Winnipeg-based McCaine Electric and chair of CCA finance committee.
“However, we would like to distance and distinguish ourselves from home builder issues.”
Questions about whether CCA’s support of CPRS would change or be altered began when the Canadian Home Builders Association (CHBA) withdrew its support of the CPRS. CHBA is instead calling for compliance holdbacks because it believes CPRS is only discovering under-reporting and not addressing the so-called cash economy.
CCA President Michael Atkinson agreed too often the federal government considers the issues of home builders as those of CCA and its members. CCA’s original conditional support for CPRS focused on it proving to be effective in addressing the underground economy.
The benefits to both the federal government and the construction industry had to outweigh the administrative costs to government and the compliance costs to industry, added Atkinson.
Michael Atkinson
CPRS has been in place for nearly a decade. A majority of contractors currently on the finance committee said it still has not been a burden to them at this time.
A 2004 report on the underground economy by economist John O’Grady of Prism Economics and Analysis suggested that 25 per cent of the entire construction work force participates in the underground economy, with 15 per cent of that total engaged in ICI construction.
O’Grady estimated that governments lost $1.3 billion in revenue between 1998 and 2000, climbing to $1.6 billion in 2003.
The government has increased audit resources but it is widely accepted that these measures have had limited effects because audits are not done on the construction site, stated O’Grady.
Also, while accounts may look suspicious, they do not easily show that workers labeled as independent operators are actually employees.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Four companies short-listed to renovate London, Ontario hospital
- Delcan to provide enegineering services for Highway 407 extension
- Hamilton water treatment plant stays in service during rebuilding operation
- Plenty of work ahead as Ontario construction-site safety blitz ends
- Construction, engineering companies mergers increased in Q2: Report
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 263 projects with a total value of $8,919,878,049 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
$120,000,000 Ottawa ON Negotiated
CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT BUILDING
$120,000,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
$50,000,000 Ottawa ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Ground broken on Halifax RCMP headquarters
- Fanshawe College’s new Centre for Applied Transportation Technologies goes green
- Vanbots continues work on York University Life Sciences Building in Toronto
- Manitoba introduces new farm building code
- Heavy rains wash away bridges to Nova Scotia fishing village
- South Korea calls for financial safety net
- Jobsite safety a shared duty: Mechanical Contractors Association
- New technology could help find Jimmy Hoffa: Study
- Crane operator certification deadline looms in British Columbia
- High-tech oil sands project near Fort McMurray, Alberta could change industry
- Saskatoon bridge closed indefinitely over structural concerns
- City of Regina project turns up all sorts of surprises
- Awareness about qualifications-based selection lacking: Survey
- Canadian Institute of Steel Construction launches Steel Day
- Saskatchewan bridge collapses, causing crane to topple
- Crane tips over, killing worker and injuring two
- Saskatoon man pulled from hole at construction site
- Churchill airport gets government cash for infrastructure upgrades
- Stantec acquires health care architectural firm
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Canada’s construction starts in a transition phase (August 27, 2010)
- U.S. initial jobless claims rise to half a million again (August 19, 2010)
- It’s been 35 years since institutional construction starts as strong (August 6, 2010)
- More










