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Manitoba

Manitoba Hydro cancels $4.2M payment to municipalities for Manitoba-Minnesota transmission line support

Manitoba Hydro has once again rescinded a payout to communities affected by the building of a controversial transmission line due to a change of heart by the provincial government.

Quashed arrangement comes 1 year after government cancelled $67.5M arrangement with Manitoba Metis Federation

Power lines
Mantoba Hydro received a 'clear directive' from the provincial government that it cannot give compensation to six municipalities in southeastern Manitoba the Manitoba-Minnesota transmission line is scheduled to run through. (Chris Seto/CBC)

Manitoba Hydro has once again cancelled a planned payout this time to the communitiesa controversial transmission line will run through aftera change in policy from the provincial government.

The Crown corporation has backed out of an approximately $4.2-million compensation package for six southeastern Manitoba municipalities in connection with a transmission line that will carry power fromManitoba to Minnesota.

"They say it's a provincial policy change and we have no say in it," said David Kiansky, reeve of the rural municipality of Stuartburn, on learning of Hydro's rationale last month.

Last year, the Progressive Conservative government quashed Hydro's $67.5 million payment to the Manitoba Metis Federation, intended to garner their support for hydroelectricity projects. Premier Brian Pallister referred to the agreement as "persuasion money."

Months later, the province scrapped the $20-million Turning the Page agreement between the MMF, Hydro and the province.

With respect to the latest cancellation, Crown Services Minister Colleen Mayer said the government offered a "clear directive to Manitoba Hydro" that it should not reimburse municipalities when there are no adverse effects, such as health and safety risks.

"Under the previous NDP government such benefit agreements were handed out without any verification of real impacts," she said in a statement. "That's no longer acceptable."

Hydro's withdrawal isdisappointing to officials from several municipalities, who were counting on funding to better their communities.

Hydro could have left a 'positive impact'

Manitoba Hydro said last weekthegrant wascontingenton the municipalities agreeing to support the placement of the controversial Manitoba-Minnesota Transmission Project line.

Theprojectwill provide the final link in a chain bringing hydroelectricity from generating stations in northern Manitoba, through the Bipole III transmission line and across the U.S. border as part of a deal with the Green Bay-based Wisconsin Public Service.

The line is already under construction in the United States. All told, it's expected to cost roughly $453 million and increasethe province's electricity export capacity to 3,185 megawattsfrom 2,300 megawatts.

Itwas criticized by many landowners who thought the line should be moved farther east towardless-populated areas.

"We knew that we couldn't stop this line from coming into the RM of Piney, but can we leave a positive return on having this line?"deputy reeve MlanieParent remembers thinking.

"I think it was an opportunity for Manitoba Hydro to leave a positive impact in this RM."

After hearing of a compensation package for communities affected by the now-completed Bipole III transmission line, Parent said her municipality asked Hydro a few years ago for a similar program to placate resident concerns about the Manitoba-Minnesotaline, and to support affectedcommunities in the long run.

This map shows the proposed route of the Manitoba-Minnesota Transmission Project. (National Energy Board)

The RM of Piney was planning to create a foundation that would offer scholarships and bursariesto youth, among otherinitiatives, as part of its $800,000 payment, Parent said.

"It would have long-lasting benefits to the individuals here, because these towers are going tobe up for not just my generation, but many generations to come," she said.

The"provincial government has taken a different position on benefit programs," Hydrosaid in a statement, andthe Crown utility is "aligning itself with the government's position."

Spokesperson Bruce Owen addedthat Manitoba Hydrohad the right to walk away because no agreements were ever signed or formally in place.

The fundingwould havebeen earmarked forcommunity enhancement projects,including projects that promote environment sustainability or provide training, employment, economic development or develop community infrastructure,Owenwrote.

Financial incentives from Hydroremainin placefor the owners of propertythe route will go through.

Kiansky said the RM of Stuartburn was going to set asidemoney to encourage year-round use of the arena in Vita, about 95 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg.

The other southeastern Manitoba municipalities that would have received money were the RMs of Springfield, Tache, La Broquerie and Ste. Anne.

Opposition to transmission line

The RM of La Broqueriewas among the vocal critics who chastised Manitoba Hydro for not choosing a more easterly route for the Manitoba-Minnesota line. They heldcommunity meetings in opposition to the transmission line.

Council eventually agreed to cease its opposition once Hydro's funding package in excess of $900,000 was proposed, said Reeve Lewis Weiss.

I know I'm the one, along with everyone else, who's really paying for these things anyway.- RM of La BroquerieReeve Lewis Weiss

He said he always opposed the transmission line, and still does.

"I had a lot of people farmers and residents that did not want that line here, so I felt like I fought pretty hard against it."

Weissisn't too botheredthat a cheque won't be coming the municipality's way, however.

"As a resident, I'm not hurt," Weiss said. "I know I'm the one, along with everyone else, who's really paying for these things anyway."