National News

Committee gets nearly 1,000 budget submissions ahead of federal budget

By The Canadian Press

Published 11:53 PDT, Mon September 29, 2025

Last Updated: 2:11 PDT, Mon September 29, 2025

The federal finance committee has received 948 briefs as part of its consultation ahead of the federal budget, with many of them touching on artificial intelligence and digital policy issues.

Among the submissions — the most the committee has received in recent years — is a request from an organization representing hospitals for more than $1 billion in AI and health-care related funding.

HealthCareCAN said the government should invest $500 million into a national organization "dedicated to AI in healthcare," which would support expert testing and evaluation of AI technologies and provide a centralized procurement model. 

A further $500 million would go to regional hubs, which would "develop and implement evidence-informed AI solutions to transform the healthcare system." An additional $100 million would be allocated for an AI and digital literacy strategy for health care providers, patients and policy makers. 

Telecom giant Rogers is asking the government to include "digital infrastructure as part of energy corridors to ensure connectivity is included in major projects with a national interest."

The government has launched a new major projects office, and earlier this month announced the first projects it intends to approve under the major projects legislation it passed this spring. That bill was meant to streamline and speed up approvals for large infrastructure projects as the federal government looks to shore up Canada's economy against the tariff hits from the United States.

A Canadian tech sector group said the government lacks a cohesive digital sovereignty strategy, and is asking Ottawa to speed up building sovereign compute and cloud infrastructure. 

The Council of Canadian Innovators said that should include "data centres that comply with Canadian security standards, sovereign identity management systems, and support for trusted domestic providers."

The group called for the government to develop a regulatory framework for sovereign digital infrastructure, as well as a digital non-alignment and industrial strategy, in which it maintains "interoperability while avoiding dependency on any single model or vendor."

IBM Canada said the government should invest in quantum, including in quantum computing infrastructure. It warned that "without greater access to the best available quantum compute infrastructure, Canada will fall behind other nations and 5 Eyes partners who are already heavily investing when it comes to applications critical to national defence and economic prosperity."

Airlines and airports asked AI Minister Evan Solomon to advance a digital ID and biometrics strategy.

The submission from the National Airlines Council of Canada and the Canadian Airports Council said the government should "establish a biometrics policy for all federal departments and agencies, supported by privacy protections and technology standards." It said that effort should involve "amending federal acts and statutes to enable the use of biometrics in the delivery of government services to Canadians."

Rumble, the Canadian-founded company that hosts U.S. President Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform, is citing free speech in pushing against online harms legislation. It said the government should "protect a free and open internet by avoiding legislation and regulation that will impede free speech and freedom of expression online."

The government will unveil the long-awaited federal budget on Nov. 4., which will be the Liberals' first budget under Prime Minister Mark Carney.

– Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press

With files from Kyle Duggan

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