Who handles infrastructure & transportation?
Infrastructure & Transportation
Transportation and infrastructure involve all three levels of government. Federal handles interprovincial corridors and ports, provinces manage highways and transit funding, and municipalities maintain local roads and transit systems.
⚠️ Shared Jurisdiction: This area involves multiple levels of government. The information below shows the primary responsibility at each level, but overlap is common. When in doubt, start with the level most directly related to your issue.
Federal
Parliament of Canada
- ● Interprovincial highways and trade corridors
- ● Ports, airports, and marine infrastructure
- ● Rail safety regulation and cross-border transport
- ● Federal infrastructure funding programs (e.g., Investing in Canada Infrastructure Program)
💡 Example: Report a railway crossing safety concern to Transport Canada, or contact your MP about federal highway funding for your region.
Provincial
Provincial Legislature
- ● Provincial highways and bridges
- ● Public transit funding and provincial planning
- ● Driver licensing and vehicle registration
- ● Provincial road safety standards
💡 Example: Report a provincial highway pothole to your provincial transportation ministry, or contact your MPP/MLA about transit funding in your area.
Municipal
City / Town Hall
- ● Local roads, sidewalks, and bike lanes
- ● Traffic signals and local signage
- ● Water mains, storm sewers, and local infrastructure
- ● Public transit operations (TTC, STM, TransLink, etc.)
💡 Example: Report a pothole or broken streetlight through your city's 311 service or online portal, or contact your city councillor about local road conditions.
Quick Reference — Who to Contact
🏛️ Federal
Your Member of Parliament (MP)
🏢 Provincial
Your MPP, MLA, or MNA
🏘️ Municipal
Your City Councillor
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