First announced in the David Peterson government's 1987 throne speech,[1] the NOHFC's creation was included in the 1988 provincial budget,[2] and the enabling legislation was given royal assent on June 7, 1988.[3] At the time, it was set up as a short-term program which was slated to conclude in 1999;[4] it has since seen periodic funding expansions and term extensions, and continues to run today, although as of 2020 the NOHFC has still not been officially converted into a permanent program.[5]
The organization's first board, consisting of 19 representatives from various cities and towns across the region, was named in July 1988.[6] One of the NOHFC's first large-scale investments was a $7.6 million contribution to the creation and construction of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.[7]
In its earliest years, the NOHFC received some criticism focusing on allegations that it was too often used as an emergency bailout fund for failing natural resource companies rather than as a mechanism to actively encourage economic development or diversification, and that it lacked sufficient controls to prevent it from becoming misused as a vote-buying slush fund.[8]
1990s
In 1990, the NOHFC gave a $5 million grant to the Algoma Central Railway,[9] which opposition Progressive Conservative leader Mike Harris alleged was a "down payment" on a secret deal to have the provincial government take over ownership and operation of the troubled company.[9] Other investments in the early 1990s included a $1 million loan to Muscocho Explorations and McNellen Resources to fund construction of a new gold mine in Wawa,[10] a $900 thousand loan to Brinkman and Associates, a tree-planting firm,[11] and a $5 million loan to Bombardier Transportation to expand the company's facility in Thunder Bay.[12]
In 1995, the Auditor General of Ontario's annual report criticized the NOHFC for not having sufficient monitoring programs in place to ensure that its investments were actually achieving their job creation goals.[13]
In the late 1990s, the NOHFC was a key investor in new projects such as the Northern Ontario Tourism Marketing Partnership,[14]NORCAT[14] and the Northern Academic Health Science Network.[15] The organization also continued to make grants or loans to existing companies or organizations to expand their operations, including grants to Cinéfest to expand its marketing and advertising,[16] and to Science North for the creation of its F. Jean MacLeod Butterfly Gallery.[17]
2000s
In the early 2000s, the NOHFC invested $16 million in the creation of a fibre-optic network to improve the region's internet and telecommunications services,[18] and made a $3.5 million grant toward the construction of Sudbury's Dynamic Earth.[19]
In this era, the NOHFC began to receive criticism for expanding its service area to include the Muskoka District, a region outside the traditional boundaries of Northern Ontario.[20] This decision was made by then-finance minister Ernie Eves, who was the MPP for Parry Sound—Muskoka at the time,[20] and was later reversed by Greg Sorbara in the 2004 provincial budget.[21]
References
^ ab"North to get economic help". Toronto Star, November 4, 1987.
^"Northern aid fund to get $360 million over next 12 years". The Globe and Mail, April 21, 1988.