St. Boniface residents decry 'hurtful' and 'obscene' Marion Street widening - Action News
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Manitoba

St. Boniface residents decry 'hurtful' and 'obscene' Marion Street widening

Dozens of St. Boniface residents opposed to a soon-to-be-defunct plan to widen Marion Street lambasted Winnipeg's public works department and consultants under its employ for the way the $566-million project was planned.

Public works committee slated to scrap $566M plan today and ask city to start anew

Winnipeg is going back to the drawing board and coming up with a cheaper and smaller means of widening Marion Street after abandoning a $566-million plan that would have seen a diamond interchange built. (City of Winnipeg)

Dozens ofSt. Boniface residents opposed to a now-doomedplan to widen Marion StreetlambastedWinnipeg'spublic works department and consultants under its employ for the waythe$566-million project was planned.

City council's public works committee spent five hours considering a cityrecommendation to cancel the Marion projectand come up with a less expensive and smaller project in its place. The project would have required the city to incur $20 million a year of additional debt financing.

Even though the committee was poised to cancel the project, residents and business owners took time off work to give Couns. JaniceLukes (South Winnipeg-St. Norbert), ShawnDobson(St. Charles),DeviSharma (OldKildonan) and CindyGilroy(Daniel McIntyre)an earful.

Theyexplainedtheyvehementlyopposed theprojectfor a litany of reasons that includedthe proposedexpropriation of dozens of properties to make way for theconstruction of a four-leaf clover they felt was vastly out of scale with residential neighbourhoods.

The opponents said the project would have destroyed their neighbourhood, vowed to vote against mayor Brian Bowman and St. Boniface Coun. Matt Allardin the next electionand used words like godless, hurtful and obsceneto describe a public-consultation process even committee chairwomanLukesdescribed as lacking.

Council's public works committee got an earful from St. Boniface residents opposed to the Marion Street widening. (Bartley Kives/CBC)
"I want to apologize for the horrible consultation process," Lukessaid in the council chamber, where the public works committee was held due to the large number of delegates who showed up to express their dissatisfaction.

Public works director Lester Deane said while he was satisfied with the breadth of public-consultation work conducted by consulting firm MMM Group, it was clear residents did not agree.

Georgia Skarpias, who owns Hair Passion on Marion Street, said her neighbours have been scared of losing their businesses and homes.

Shesaid she is upset the city spent roughly $1 million planning the project to date.

"I'm glad they listened to us," she said. "Nobody was listening to us, at the beginning. We fought a year."

Skarpias will have to wait another two months, as the public works committee voted to put off a decision on the Marion widening until November.

The holdup is taking place because the committee was unclearwhether MMM Group can or should be awarded a subsequent public consultation-contract about other options for widening Marion Street.

Deaneand Winnipegtransportation manager LuisEscobarsaid a street widening with a reduced scale will not offer the city the same benefits in terms of freeing the flow of east-westtraffic between St.BonifaceandLagimodiereBoulevard.

But they said theyrecommended the city abandon the $566-million versionof the project, anyway, partly because of public opposition.

Lukescountered that Deane'sreport to council cited financial reasons for abandoning the plan. She asked how it was possible for the design to balloon to more than $500 million.

The Marion Street widening was the city's No. 2 infrastructure priority, after the construction of the Waverley underpass, which is proceeding. Ottawa was poised to contribute money to the project, though Lukes noted it was the former Harper government that made that tentative commitment.

Lukes said the city will reassess its infrastructure-funding priorities. She also mused it may be time to make an independent transportation authority responsible for major infrastructure-funding decisions.

In 2011, thecity's Transportation Master Plan ratedthe replacement of the Louise Bridge as a higher priority than the Waverley underpass. A 2015 city council vote placed Waverley and Marion on top of the city's wish list.