Empress, Garry and McGregor top list of Winnipeg road-renewal projects planned for 2018 - Action News
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Manitoba

Empress, Garry and McGregor top list of Winnipeg road-renewal projects planned for 2018

In 2018, the city will spend $116 million on road renewals, a rise of $11 million from 2017, when the city devoted $105 million to this task.

What does $116M in roadwork look like? Here's where your money goes

Winnipeg plans to spend $116 million on road renewals in 2018. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Earlier this week, Mayor Brian Bowman identified fixingWinnipeg's streets as the city's top priority. He followedthat up on budget day by announcing a record level of road-renewal spending of infrastructure spending.

According to the budgetreleased Wednesday, the city will spend $116million in 2018 on road renewals, a category that also includes some sidewalks, curbs and shoulders but mostly involves actual streets. That figure represents a rise of $11 million from 2017, when the city devoted $105 million to this task.

The increase is significant for two reasons. First, it allows the mayor to follow through om a campaign promise to ensure almost all the proceeds of Winnipeg's annual property-tax hike are spent on road renewals.

As well, the increase in spending on roads stands in contrast to a $74-million drop in overall infrastructure spending next year.

Here's how most of the 2018 road-renewal budget breaks down:

1. Regional street reconstructions and major rehabilitations

There's $52.5million set aside next year to tear upand rebuild eight heavily used routes and improve Portage and Main:

  • Empress Street: $11.4million for reconstruction between Portage Avenue and St. Matthews Avenue.
  • Garry Street: $9.1 millionfrom Assiniboine Avenue north to Portage Avenue and then northwest on Notre Dame Avenue to Princess Street.
  • McGregor Street: $7.6 million from Mountain Avenue to Selkirk Avenue.
  • McPhillipsStreet: $6.6 million from Logan Avenue to Jarvis Avenue.
  • Fermor Avenue: $6 million from Rue Archibald to St. Anne's Road.
  • Roblin Avenue: $5.3 million for the eastbound lanes from Assiniboine Park Drive to Shaftesbury Boulevard.
  • Pembina Highway: $2.8million for the northbound lanes between Avenue Ducharme and CloutierDrive
  • Portage and Main: $2 million for intersection improvements
  • St. James Street: $1.7 million from Sargent Avenue to Ellice Avenue.

2. 'Mill and fill' work

The city will also replacethe top layerof one othermajor street:

  • Kenaston Boulevard: $700,000from Ness Avenue to TaylorAvenue.

3. Local street renewals

The city will spend $28.3 million next year rebuilding local streets. The public works department decides which ones to fix after consulting with councillors for each ward.

4. Gravel roads

There's $3 million set aside next year for so-called granular roadways, including the southern stretchof Waverley Street.

5. Additionalroads on Winnipeg'swish list

Winnipeg also hopes to fix sections of 19 more regional streets over the next six yearswith the help of $182 million worth of federal funding. The catch is the province has to sign off on the city's federal-funding wish list.

The roads in question are:

  • Archibald Street.
  • Broadway.
  • Corydon Avenue.
  • Dunkirk Drive.
  • Erin Street.
  • Grant Avenue.
  • Keewatin Street.
  • King Edward Street.
  • LagimodiereBoulevard.
  • Pandora Avenue.
  • PembinaHighway.
  • Portage Avenue.
  • Regent Avenue.
  • Roblin Boulevard.
  • Salter Street.
  • Sargent Avenue.
  • Selkirk Avenue.
  • Sturgeon Road.
  • University Crescent.

Mayor Brian Bowman repeated his pitch to the province on Thursday, urging BrianPallister's government to endorse the city's request for federal funds.

While the request would not require the province to spend more money on city roads than it already does, Bowman said he feared the Progressive Conservatives have other uses in mind for federal infrastructure dollars.

"My concern is they may have other prioritiesthatmay not be aligned andthey may be outside the Perimeter Highway," Bowman said at the public works department's East Yards.

"Two-thirds of Manitobans live in Winnipeg. To me, supportingthis to the greatest extent possible is a no-brainer."

Minister of Municipal Relations Jeff Wharton said the province is working with the city and doing its "due diligence" on the road-renewal plans, but isn'tready to sign on.

"The mayor, [it]is clear to him that he feels that it's money that just needs to be signed over to him, but that's simply not the truth. The truth is simple: it's a three-way partnership, a third, a third, a third," Wharton said.

The minister also disputed the $182 million federal funding figure Bowman provided.

"I believe it's $170 million, is what their request was for, initially. So we'd like to be clear on what the ask is."

With files from Aidan Geary