Manitoba water, transit projects get $205M funding boost - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba water, transit projects get $205M funding boost

Public transit and water treatment projects got a boost Monday as the federal and provincial government announced millions in funding for Manitoba municipalities.

4 Winnipeg transit projects to see $79M from province, feds

The federal and provincial governments announced millions of dollars in joint funding Monday that will go to municipalities to help with transit, water and waste infrastructure upgrades. (CBC)

Public transit and water treatmentprojectsgot a $205-million boost Monday as the federal and provincial governments announced millions in funding forManitoba municipalities.

About$101.2 millionwill be funnelled into 27 Manitoba projects as part of the federal government's 10-year infrastructure investment plan. A total of more than$178million in funding is expected tobe available to municipalities through the federalPublic Transit Fund and Canadian Water and Wastewater Fund.

In the past, the federal government has putup one-third of the funding for provincial infrastructure projects; under the new agreement, it willnow cover about half of the cost. The province (25 per cent) and municipalities (25 per cent) will fork up the rest,Manitoba Municipal Relations MinisterEileen Clarke said.

The City of Winnipeg alone will see almost$53 million from the federal governmentand close to $26.5 millionfrom the provincego toward four transit projects, saidMaryAnn Mihychuk, minister of employment, workforce development and labour.That money is expected to help buy new buses, fix old ones and expand bus maintenance space.

The announcement comes three days after CBC News reported details about a bus maintenance backlog that led to significant overtime bills for Winnipeg Transit last year.

Money for RMs

More than $73 million through the water and waste fund just over $49 million from the feds and a little more than $24.5 million from the provincial government hasbeen committed to 23 other projects. Among those projects is thedevelopment of a pump house and reservoir in the rural municipality of West St. Paul, which the province says will allow the community to retrieve water from the Cartier Regional Water Co-op system.

West St. Paul Mayor Bruce Henley said his community will receive $3 millionfor the project.

Henley said if you combine the enhanced funding from the federal government with declining construction prices, it means municipalities will be ableto do more infrastructure upgrades than they previously thought was possible.
MaryAnn Mihychuk, federal minister of employment, workforce development and labour, and Eileen Clark, Manitoba minister of Indigenous and municipal relations, sign a funding agreement Monday in Winnipeg that will see $101,975,000 go toward 27 transit and water projects across Manitoba. (Sean Kavanagh/CBC)

"This is going to be a huge stimulus that's going to allow us to do more work and get it done as quick as possible," Henley said.

Clarke also noted adownturn in construction prices is helping get more projects on the go. The minister says the cost of construction has been affected byfewer floods in Manitoba.

"Tenders are coming in lower on projects in 2016from what we've traditionally seen in the pastperhaps four years since the flooding in 2011," Clarke said. "All of these things are a real boost to our government. They are also a boost to our municipalities."

TheAssociation of Manitoba Municipalities (AMM) is also pleased with the funding announcement. The organization hasbeen calling on the federal and provincial governments for more funding to smaller communities as part of its "Fair share Fair Say" campaign.

"Municipalities have called for a 'fair say' on how infrastructure dollars are invested, while stressing the importance of clean and safe drinking water as well as efficient wastewater treatment for Manitobans,"ChrisGoertzen, president of the AMM, said in a release Monday.

"Our association is pleased to be at the table as a partner working alongside the federal and provincial governments in selecting municipal infrastructure projects that benefit our communities."

With files from Sean Kavanagh