Big city mayors meet in Winnipeg - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 03:41 AM | Calgary | -1.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Big city mayors meet in Winnipeg

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is back in Winnipeg this weekend to attend a national gathering of mayors, city councillors and municipal officials.

Infrastructure cash, reconciliation on agenda at Federation of Canadian Municipalities conference

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman shows Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi around the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (BERT SAVARD/CBC)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is back in Winnipeg this weekend to attend a national gathering of mayors, city councillors and municipal officials.

Trudeau, whoattended the Liberal Party convention in the Manitoba capital last weekend, returns Friday to attend the the annual conference organized by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, which representscities, towns and rural political entitiesacross the country.

The conference, last held in Winnipeg in 2003, kicks off today with a meeting of 21 big-city mayors, including Toronto's John Tory, Vancouver'sGregorRobertson andNaheedNenshifrom Calgary.

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman, who spent most of Wednesday showing Nenshi around, said some mayors are attending in person this year rather than sending representatives in their place in order to see the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.

According to an agenda published by the FCM, thebig-city mayors plan to discuss infrastructure funding, housing and reconciliation during meetings with federal Infrastructure and Communities MinisterAmarjeetSohi, Families, Children and Social Development Minister Jean-YvesDuclosand PerryBellegarde, the national chief of the Assembly of First Nation.

Bowmanchairs the FCMworking group that's trying to co-ordinate how citiesrespondto the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to action. He took on this task after acknowledging the city's problems with bothinstitutional and overt racism in 2015.

The full FCM conference, which is expected to attract about 2,000 elected officials and bureaucrats to Winnipeg, kicks off Friday with an address byTrudeau. NDP Leader TomMulcairand Green Party Leader Elizabeth May and Conservative MPDianneWatts will also address the conference over the weekend.

Fort Rouge-East Fort Garry Coun. Jenny Gerbasi, an FCM vice-president, said Trudeau's presence at the conference suggests the federal government takes the concerns of municipalities seriously. At budget time in March, the Trudeau government pledged to spend $3.4 billion on transit over three years as well as $5 billion over five years on "green infrastructure" such as waste-water improvements.

Municipal officials, who have lobbied Ottawa for years for more help to repair roads, build transit corridors and improve sewage-treatment plants, want to know more about the federal pledges,Gerbasisaid.

"What are these new federal dollars that have been promised? What are they going to look like?" she asked.

She also said the conference offers a chance to show off new attractions in Winnipeg, including the human rights museum and the renovated Assiniboine Park Zoo.