Manitoba trails get $970K boost for maintenance, enhancements - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba trails get $970K boost for maintenance, enhancements

Thirty trails across Manitoba are getting a financial boost from the province through this years Trails Manitoba grant program.

Trails Manitoba got almost 70 applications for money, 30 projects selected: president

Two people walk four dogs on leashes on a trail lined with tall grass.
People walk their dogs on a trail at Assiniboine Forest, which is getting $50,000 from the province for navigation enhancements and signs. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

More than two dozen trails across Manitoba are getting a financial boost this year through a provincial grant program.

Nearly $970,000 is being doled out to the 30 recreational trail projects approved under the Trails Manitoba grant program this year, says Environment, Climate and Parks Minister Jeff Wharton.

"The last few years have shown us how important trails are to Manitobans and how much they contribute to people's health, happiness and well-being," Wharton said at a Friday news conference.

Projects in Steinbach, Ste. Agathe, Ashern, Dauphin, Swan River and Winnipegare among those getting funding.

Trails Manitoba anon-profit organization that works to promotethe development and use of recreational trails in the provincegotalmost 70 applications for grants this year from volunteer trail groups, municipalities and Indigenous communities, president Erik Dickson said.

He also acknowledged the work that goes into caring for trails across the province.

"Many trails in Manitoba are built and or maintained through the hard work of volunteers, and I'd like to thank them for their efforts," he said.

The next round of grant application intake is scheduled for this fall, Dickson said.

The money for the program, which gave out its first grants last year, comes froma provincial endowment fund with the Winnipeg Foundation.

This year, the grants are going toward trail maintenance, enhancements and amenities for existing trails, the government said in a news release.

Some of this year's recipientsinclude:

  • $75,000 for Valley Life Recreation and the Squirrel Hills Trail Park near Minnedosa.
  • $50,000 for navigation enhancements and signs at Assiniboine Forest in Winnipeg.
  • $33,450 for Lake Manitoba First Nation and the Zaagaate Trail and Pollinator Meadow.
  • $30,000 for Ste Agathe Community Development Inc. and the Ste. Agathe Baudry Trails Project.
  • $10,000 for the Souris Parks Board and the Victoria Park trail extension and stairs.
  • $3,934 for the Town of Beausejour and trail enhancement and maintenance at Chryplywy Park.

The Charleswood Rotary Club is leading the Assiniboine Forest project, Wharton said.

A man speaks into a microphone at a podium as two others stand behind him.
Erik Dickson, president of Trails Manitoba, speaks alongside Environment, Climate and Parks Minister Jeff Wharton and Jack Wilson, vice-president of the Charleswood Rotary Club, at a Friday news conference. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Jack Wilson, vice-president of the rotary club, said the organization has been a steward of the forest for over 30 years. It now has over 18 kilometres of officially maintained trails.

The rotary club started along-range planning studyin 2017 that identified a need to make the trails more accessible, install better wayfinding signs, protect the existing flora and fauna, and introduce ways to help people to learn about what the area was like before settlers arrived, Wilson said.

"This grant will certainly assist us in moving forward in upgrading the wayfinding signage and enhancing trails in Assiniboine Forest," he said.

Dave Ternier, board chair of Valley Life Recreation, said it's exciting to be almost ready to start work on the new Squirrel Hills Trail Park in western Manitoba just over a year after the project was announced.

"To be here where we are at today, just 13 months later, you know, literally days away from breaking ground it's such an exciting feeling," Ternier told CBC's Radio Noon host Cory Funk.

"I know I speak for the whole board that I represent. We're all pretty pumped."

Ternier said $521,000 of the project's original $658,000 budget has been raised so far through public and private donors, including the grant from the province and money from several local businesses in the Minnedosa area.

He said trails can be a hugely important part of a community.

"Trails are such a low-cost investment in recreation while simultaneously delivering huge benefits when it comes to, you know, the health and wellness of community members and making places attractive to live and work," Ternier said.

A crew is expected to break ground on the project on Aug. 22. It's anticipated to take between six and eight weeks, he said.

By 2025, $5 million is expected to be spent on trail projects across Manitoba, the province's news release said. Another $5 million will generate revenue in a long-term fund for trail creation, maintenance and enhancement.

The full list of this year's recipients is available on the Trails Manitoba website.

With files from Cory Funk