Skip to main content

Snow clearing costs already piling up at Winnipeg City Hall

Share

Finance officials at Winnipeg City Hall are hoping mother nature is kind this winter, as the snow budget is already being pushed over its limit.

The public works department is requesting a $13.1 million over expenditure for costs up to June 30 this year.

The main culprit is a $9.8 million dollar overrun for snow and ice clearing . There is also $2.6 million earmarked for city beautification, and $1.4 million for pothole patching, which is offset by $819,000 in savings.

Public Works Committee Chair Janice Lukes said this is the price for living in a winter city.

"We're going to have to figure this out because we need to move in the city. We can't be sitting in snow banks,” she said.

“We need snow removal. I'm hoping the weather stays great."

She’s hoping the weather stays great because the department is also requesting an additional $9.9 million for snow clearing to the end of the year in case it is needed. The department said this is required to ensure contractors are paid in a timely manner.

‘It literally could go either way’

Environment and Climate Change Canada meteorologist Natalie Hasell says forecasts show dry conditions in the short term for southern Manitoba, but the longer term forecast is a coin toss.

"Looking at the precipitation question, we don't have a dominant trend,” she said.

“So in a sense, I don’t have a forecast for you. It literally could go either way."

The city has increased the snow budget in an attempt to curb these types of over expenditures, including improving sidewalk clearing. Still, the report said snowfall amounts might not be the real issue. Instead, the average cost of retendering 10 private snow clearing contracts in 2023 increased by 52 per cent over two years.

Finance Committee Chair Jeff Browaty says contract costs have exploded.

"I mean, the equipment has gotten more expensive. Labour has gotten more expensive, so there's been definitely challenges in the costs and the realities of the cost of snow clearing.”

The over expenditure requests are set to voted on at the finance committee next week.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

A police photographer recounts the harrowing day of the Polytechnique massacre

Montreal crime scene photographer Harold Rosenberg witnessed a lot of horror over his thirty years on the job, though nothing of the magnitude of what he captured with his lens at the Polytechnique on December 6, 1989. He described the day of the Montreal massacre to CTV Quebec Bureau Chief Genevieve Beauchemin.

Northern Ontario man sentenced for killing his dog

WARNING: This article contains graphic details of animal abuse which may be upsetting to some readers. A 40-year-old northern Ontario man is avoiding prison after pleading guilty to killing his dog earlier this year.

Stay Connected