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Major projects run on public confidence, not just public funding  

Published: Calgary Herald April 7, 2026 

Canada is entering a defining era of federal major projects that will shape our economy and our global competitiveness for decades. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s major project announcements signal an ambition to accelerate nation-building infrastructure.  

The opportunity is as enormous as the responsibility. These projects will not succeed on capital alone. They will succeed only if citizens are meaningfully engaged in the decisions that determine what gets built, where, and how.  

Too often public engagement is treated like a box to tick after the route is picked, the budget is set, and the press release is drafted. That approach is outdated and expensive. It slows shovels, inflames conflict, ignores Indigenous Title and Rights and turns significant projects into symbols of mistrust.  

There’s a misconception that engagement slows things down. Major projects operate at the speed of trust. Done early, it recognizes rights, helps surface concerns, hopes and opportunities before they harden into opposition.  

Consider the projects that dominate the Canadian imagination and investor spreadsheets. LNG in B.C. is framed as an export opportunity and geopolitical tool, particularly as allies seek reliable energy supply. High-speed rail, new transmission, nuclear projects, and carbon capture are pitched as the infrastructure of productivity and resilience. These projects can face community opposition as they touch identity, jurisdiction, and intergenerational risk.  

Early and thoughtful public engagement can be the difference between lasting trust and mere compliance. Compliance is brittle and can be obtained by rushing a timeline or narrowing a comment period. Consent stands the test of time. It is earned through co-development and co-design with rights holders and through early conversations that shape decisions. When engagement happens early, it reveals local knowledge that improves design, reduces environmental risk, and prevents avoidable cost overruns. When it happens downstream, it becomes a referendum on trust.  

We do not have to speculate about what happens when governments get ahead of their public. Ontario recently floated the idea of changing month-to-month “evergreen” leases, triggering swift backlash from tenants and housing advocates. Within days, the Province called off the proposed consultations. That is what a hurried signal looks like in the real world: confusion first, outrage second, retreat third. The policy may not be a megaproject but the lesson is relatable. Decisions that land as surprises invite opposition that becomes a schedule, cost, and reputation problem.  

Now raise the stakes to a proposed major project within Indigenous territories. Here, engagement is not only best practice but a constitutional reality. Nations are rights holders with their own governments, laws, and priorities. Projects that treat Indigenous engagement as a risk-mitigation tactic miss the biggest opportunity on the table: shared decision making and prosperity built through equity participation, procurement pathways, training pipelines, and stewardship models that reflect Indigenous knowledge and authority. Done well, this is reconciliation you can measure: jobs created, revenues shared, language and culture supported, and ecological outcomes strengthened.  

From racialized Canadians to newcomers to people with disabilities, low-income communities, and beyond, engagement insights can reveal practical barriers and unintended consequences of a project. 

Carney’s bold agenda matched by billions in investments presents an opportunity. Canada can build fast and engage meaningfully at the same time. 

The International Association for Public Participation is refining its global guidelines for public engagement. The goal is clearer, faster decision-making and projects rooted in the voices of the people most affected. 

Engage early. Agree on a shared vision. Share information clearly. Put real options on the table. Fund participation so communities are not asked to volunteer their capacity. Respect Indigenous title and rights. Then communicate with humility because Canadians can tell the difference between information and persuasion.  

That is how we turn major projects into collective national achievements.  

About the author
Lori DeLuca / Engagement & Communications Director  
Lori DeLuca is a Calgary-based engagement and communications director with ChangeMakers. She brings more than 20 years of experience helping organizations achieve their goals. She excels at developing and executing strategies that build trust, advance equity, and deliver measurable impact. Her award-winning work has secured multi-million-dollar funding, shaped policy and strengthened organizational reputation across public, private and non-profit sectors, including infrastructure, policing, economic development and aviation. Recognized for her political acuity and steady leadership, Lori skillfully navigates complex, sensitive environments with confidence by building strong relationships and applying creative, inclusive solutions to high-stakes challenges.