City pays nearly $500K for land it overlooked near Waverley underpass - Action News
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Manitoba

City pays nearly $500K for land it overlooked near Waverley underpass

The City of Winnipeg bought a nubbin of Fort Garry land for almost $500,000 because officials in charge of acquiring property for the Waverley underpass lost track of its ownership.

Officials lost track of CN land, then recommended 'motivated' purchase to keep construction on schedule

Work is starting on the Waverley Street underpass. While the city expropriated most of the land it needs to conduct the work, it missed a 12,600-square-foot parcel CN Rail sold to a third party. Acquiring that piece cost the city $491,000. (Bartley Kives/CBC)

The City of Winnipeg bought a nubbin of Fort Garry land for almost $500,000because officials in charge of acquiring property for the Waverleyunderpass lost track of its ownership.

The city is the early stages of building a $155-million underpass to to eliminateWaverley Street traffic delays at theCN Main line. Beforethe project could proceed, the city had to expropriate some properties and get permission to cross others in order to reroute the street, as well as the rail line, during construction.

According to a report to city council's property committee, the city identified all the land it needed for the projectin May 2015 and startedworking on purchase or easement deals the following year.

It wasn't until this February when city officialslearned they lost track of one crucial piece of property, a 12,600-square-foot triangle of land south of the rail line and east ofWaverleyStreet. The city wasn't awareCN Rail sold it in July 2015,when the railwaygot rid of a former spur line.

With no time to expropriate the land, real-estate officials recommended the city buy it outright. This ledcouncil's property committee to meet behind closed doors last week to approve the purchase of the land for$491,288, a premium rate equivalent to about $1.7 million per acre.

Transaction a 'motivated sale'

"The purchase price falls in line with other motivated sales for critical acquisitions over the past five years,"Winnipeg real estate manager JohnZabudbneywrote in a report to the committee.

Hewroteif the citydidn'tacquire the land this spring, itwould delay the construction of the rail-line detour until after this summer. That, in turn, would cost the cityanother$7.5 million a year in construction costs and require both Ottawa and the province to give the city more time to complete the project, contrary to their funding agreements.

"Redirecting train traffic over to the temporary rail-line detour in the fall of 2017 is critical to the overall project schedule, as it allows underpass bridge construction and associated roadworks to occur in subsequent years,"Zabudneywrote.

"The rail-line detour construction work is seasonal in nature it can not occur in the winter therefore, a delay in obtaining the required lands would result in at least a one-year delay to the project completion date."

An artist's rendering of the completed Waverley underpass. (City of Winnipeg)
Council property committee chair John Orlikow(River Heights-Fort Garry) said he could not comment on the deal because revealingwhat the city paid for the land couldweakenits positionin future property transactions.

Alissa Clark, a spokesperson for the city, saidreal estate officialscould not comment for the same reason. She said reports like this are approved behind closed doors because "they may contain information which, if disclosed, could prejudice contractual or other ongoing negotiations by the City of Winnipeg."

CN sold the land as part of a larger sale of 12 acres to a numbered Manitobacompany whosedirector is listed as Toronto financier Moray Tawse, the co-founder of First National Financial, Canada's largest non-bank lender.

Timothy Dewart, the Winnipeg lawyer for the numbered company, said he has no knowledge of the transaction.

CN spokesperson Kate Fenske said the railway was not looking for a buyer for its old rail spur.

"CN was approached in 2014 by an interested party who wanted to purchase the land. The land was sold and it closed in 2015," Fenske said in a statement.

The city's purchase of the 12,600-square-foot portion of this landdoes not need any further approval by council.