Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Login

Login

Please fill in your credentials to login.

Don't have an account? Register Sign up now.

ManitobaAnalysis

52 years after Unicity, a new Metro Winnipeg planning adventure winds up out of bounds

More than 50 years after Unicity, Winnipeg wrestles anew with the challenge of maintaining water and sewer systems and major roads that are also used by residents of nearby municipalities.

A snap decision by the premier could pull plug on planning framework for the Manitoba capital region

Downtown Winnipegm with the Red River in the foreground.
Winnipeg is once again trying to figure out how to co-ordinate planning efforts with its neighbours. The premier's recent announcement that municipalities will be able to opt out of a regional planning framework won't make that any easier. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Half a century after Winnipeg merged with its neighbours, the city isonce again trying to figure outhow to co-operate with the municipalities outside its borders.

That's not going to get easierafter the events of the past few days.

Winnipegmerged with 11 adjacent cities, towns and rural municipalitiesin 1972, in a move that was supposed to eliminate conflict between Manitoba's capital andfast-growing bedroom communities

Beforethat amalgamation, known as Unicity, municipal governance in the Winnipeg areawas messy. Thecity and its neighbours competed for provincial funding, bickered over shared responsibilities, and went off in 12 different directions when it came to taxation and service delivery.

On top of that, a separate level of governmentcalled Metro Winnipeg was responsible for the busiest roads, the most popular parks, and the largest sewer pipes and water mains.

Unicity did away with all of this, foreshadowing municipal amalgamations elsewhere in Canada. Today, Vancouver is pretty muchthe only major Canadian city that has not undergone some form of similar merger.

Amalgamation did not, of course, solve Winnipeg's problems. Fifty-two years later, the city is wrestling anew with the challenge of maintaining water and sewer systems and major roads that are also used by residents of nearby municipalities.

A map of Winnipeg Metropolitan Region, encompassing Manitoba's capital and 17 surrounding municipalities.
The Winnipeg Metropolitan Region encompasses Manitoba's capital and 17 surrounding municipalities. The Kinew government plans to give every member the option of opting out. (Winnipeg Metropolitan Region)

Those jurisdictions, meanwhile, are also trying to figure out how to manage their own growth or lack of it with more limited developmentexpertise, as well as part-time politicians.

Under Brian Pallister, Manitoba's former Progressive Conservativegovernment decided on a solution to this heterogenous hodgepodge. In 2019, the then premier effectively brought back something akin to Metro Winnipeg, which the Ed Schreyer NDP dissolved in the 1970s.

Now, the revamped Winnipeg Metropolitan Region has a board of its own, powers of its own and a proposed regional planning framework.

It also appears to be dead in the water.

Municipalities can opt out: Kinew

On Tuesday, Premier Wab Kinewannouncedmunicipalities will soon have the option of opting out of the Winnipeg Metro Region. This sudden movetook place after no fewer than five of those municipalities expressed some degree ofopposition to the regional plan, known as Plan 20-50.

Some, like the City of Selkirk, didn't want to be part of the Metro Region in the first place. Others, like the Town of Niverville, wanted the province to change Plan 20-50or scrap it altogether.

Almost all havefieldedangry calls from residents upset by aspects of the plan that do not exist but nonetheless have circulatedon social media.

Thissituation led Chris Ewen, the mayor of Ritchot, to write Kinew and Municipal Relations Minister Ian Bushie, complaining Winnipeg Metropolitan Region administrators have made things even worse.

Fearing for the integrity of a public hearing process, they fuelled thefire by telling Metro Regionboard members not to talk about Fight Club or rather, Plan 20-50, according to Ewen's letter,posted on his Facebook page.

"More than ever, it is now critical to answer the questions of community members when a change that will affect over a million people is about to happen," Ewen said in the letter.

"I watched a handful of municipalities send statements to the public, without working collaboratively with the rest of the WMR[Winnipeg Metropolitan Region] municipalities, creating an even stronger divide between Manitobans."

EwenaskedKinewand Bushie to revisit Plan 20-50. They obliged, declaring membership in the Winnipeg Metropolitan Region will soonbe voluntary.

Unintended consequences

The premier and his minister say the Metro Regioncan continue witha depleted membership. A look at a map suggests this is unlikely.

If the Rural Municipality of Headingley, aPlan 20-50 opponent, leaves the Metro Region, it would make orphans out of both St. Franois Xavier and Cartier.

If St. Andrews opts out of Plan 20-50, why would Dunnotarremain? Why would Niverville, if Ritchot leaves?

A man wearing a dark blue blazer, white shirt and blue tie looks at a reporter while answering questions in a scrum.
Ian Bushie, Manitoba's minister of municipal and northern relations, says the province wants co-operation between municipalities. Even if some municipalities do opt out of the Winnipeg Metropolitan Region, 'there's still a plan that we want to be able to co-ordinate going forward,' he said. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

Nonetheless, Kinew and Bushie maintain regional co-ordination between Winnipeg and its neighbours can proceed among whoever decides to remain in the lame-duck club.

"We want co-operation between municipalities. So when we give them the opportunity to opt out, I mean, there's still a plan that we want to be able to co-ordinate going forward," Bushie said.

"What that looks like will be up tothe municipalities who will partake."

This laissez-faire attitude has left some developers aghast.Several told CBC News the NDP government has unwittingly imperilled efforts to protect agricultural land outside Winnipeg from residential encroachment and to build housing for seniors in exurban communities, among other unintended consequences.

On Thursday, Kinew was asked whether it makes more sense tosimply expand Winnipeg's borders again, this time perhaps to swallow up sections of Springfield, Rosser, Macdonald, and both St. Pauls.

"Well,that's going much further than actually any of this conversation talks about," he said.

Given the way Kinew has chosen to drapehimself in the affectations of populism the NDP leader calls hispending Metro Region legislation a "freedom bill" the mere mention ofannexationis bound to prove vexatious.