Protesters install blockade along Provincial Road 280, demand repairs - Action News
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Manitoba

Protesters install blockade along Provincial Road 280, demand repairs

Protesters have installed a blockade along the road between Thompson and Gillam. No commercial vehicles are allowed to pass but protesters are allowing private vehicles to use the roadway, said a Facebook post Tuesday.

Highway 280 is filled with potholes and ruts, Tataskweyak Cree Nation band councillor says

Dozens of protesters are at the Manitoba Legislature demanding improvements to the road between Thompson and Gillam. (Alana Cole/CBC)
Protesters have installed a blockade along the road between Thompson and Gillam in northern Manitoba. No commercial vehicles, including some Manitoba Hydro vehicles, are allowed to pass but protesters are allowing private vehicles to use the roadway.
Protesters have installed a blockade along Provincial Road 280. They are preventing commercial traffic from using the roadway to draw attention to the poor road conditions. (PR 280 Road Conditions/Facebook)

The protestors are demandingthe new provincial government improve Manitoba Provincial Road280 road conditions.

Dozens of demonstrators gatheredat the Manitoba Legislature Tuesday to draw attention to the issue.

In question period, Manitoba'sInfrastructure Minister Blaine Pedersen said the government will continue to work with community members to upgradePR 280.

Highway 280 is filled with potholes and ruts, causing unsafe driving conditions, saidNathan Neckoway, band councillor forTataskweyak Cree Nation. The northern Manitoba community isnortheast of Thompson.

"We're having private vehicles, we're having actual semis, a few buses, getting stuck in some of the areas due to soft and pothole conditions," he said.

"The road condition right now is in the worst condition it ever was due to the high volume of traffic on the highway."

Semi-trailer trucks deal with mud on Manitoba Highway 280 over the May long weekend. (Facebook/PR 280)
Neckowaysaid he and some community members will meet with thedeputy minister of infrastructure and a spokesperson for ManitobaHydro.

This isn't the first time Neckoway and other community members have met with the provincial government but this is the first time they will meet with the newly elected government, he said.

"We want to hear their view, and hopefully they have a better commitment and continue to support the upgrades on PR [provincial road] 280," he said.

Protesters walk down Highway 280 before heading to Winnipeg. (Facebook/PR 280)