Winnipeg city council narrowly passes 2021 budget loaded with significant federal support - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 04:34 AM | Calgary | -12.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Winnipeg city council narrowly passes 2021 budget loaded with significant federal support

The 2021 budget was passedby Winnipeg's city council witha tighter margin than in recent times. The vote was9-7 for the operating budget, and 11-5 for capital spending.

Millions of dollars from Ottawa allows council to avoid some difficult decisions

Speaker Devi Sharma voted against the operating budget tightening the vote to 9 to 7 as it narrowly passed. (Darin Morash/CBC )

The 2021 budget was passedby Winnipeg's city council witha tighter margin than in recent times.

The vote was 9-7 in favour ofthe operating budget, and 11-5for capital spending.

The narrow margin came from theusuallyunderstated voice of council Speaker Devi Sharma, whobroke her consistent record of supportingbudgets by voting "no"on the operating portion of the 2021 budget.

The Old Kildonan councillor saidthe structure of how the budget is pulled together and the input that's gatheredfor it must be "greatly improved."

Sharma declined an interview with media following the vote.

Mayor Bowman along with councillorsAllard, Browaty, Chambers, Gillingham, Gilroy, Mayes, Orlikow and Rollinsvoted to pass the operating budget, while councillorsEadie,Klein,Lukes, Nason, Santos,Schreyer and Sharma voted against it.

Eadie and Santos changed sides when it came to voting onthe capital portion of the budget.

Old Kildonan councillor and speaker Devi Sharma departed from years of voting 'yes' on previous budgets by voting against the 2021 operating budget. (Darin Morash/CBC )

Manyof the major spending commitments this year are locked into a multi-year budget process,which shortens the list of what might have normally made headlines either cuts to programs or services, or new funding initiatives.

Feds show the city the money

This would be a completely different budget were itnot for $74.5 million from Ottawa's Federal Safe Restart program.

It's split into $42.2 million for COVID-19 operating costs and $32.3 million for losses from decreased ridership on public transit.

Mayor Brian Bowman admitted there would be many more "difficult decisions" without the federal funding.

Winnipeg's roads will get upgraded and repaired to the tune of $152 million.

There's a $50 million commitment to libraries and recreational facilitiescourtesy of a grant from the provincial government and $7.6 million set aside to allow deferrals of property and business tax payments.

There's also a wellness fund to help residents get through the effects of the partial lockdown prompted by thepandemic.

The police and fire service budgets get increases of twoper cent, but the Winnipeg Police Service has to find $5 millionto cover a shortfall from a failed effort to change officer's pensions.

Business taxes are frozen at 4.8 per cent and property taxes will go up 2.33 per cent the same increase as the last several years, which isdedicated to infrastructure improvements.

Delegations spoke to budget

There were four delegationswhospoke before councillors weighed in on the budget.

Representatives from the Manitoba Heavy Construction Association and the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce said they liked what they saw in the city's spending this yearmoney for roads and infrastructure, and some support for small business with no increases in their taxes.

Last week more than 50 delegations appeared in front of the mayor's executive policy committeeto blast the budget for not cutting spending to the Winnipeg Police Service,calling for the money to instead support community services and other programs.

As council prepared to vote Wednesday, it heardheard from community development activists Marianne Cerilli and Steve Snyder, who spoke against the budget.Both calledfor the city to improve consultation on how it spends, and reminded them of their obligations to all Winnipeggers.

"How will keeping every budget stagnant except for police and fire [services]improve prosperity for people?" Snyder askedthe councillors.

Finance chair Scott Gillinghamacknowledged there was room for improvement but defended the budget and how it was put together.

"There is a lot of the budget that meets the needs of residents in all the wards of our city," the St. James councillor said.

A number of councillorswho are not part of the executive policy committee were having no part inapproving the budgeta common thread among them being a charge that there is simply not enough collaboration in the budget process.

Coun. Vivian Santos (Point Douglas) who also voted against the operating budget delivered an impassioned speech to council on where the city and its budget was failing residents in terms of poverty, health and well-being.

"If you listen to our community we would have heard loud and clear ... they are asking for a socially balanced budget as well as fiscally balanced," Santos said.

Process not inclusive,councillorssay

"There is no wayhumanly possible waythat in sevenbusiness days, one can do justice to scrutinizing the budget,"Waverley West Coun.Janice Lukes said, decrying the power EPC councillors have over input into the process.

Lukessays the model in Winnipeg is nothing like the model of governance in most major Canadian cities.

Coun. Shawn Nason says the budget process falls short on innovation. (John Einarson/CBC )

Coun. Shawn Nason(Transcona)agreed the process provides few ways for participation for non-EPC members and didn't see "partnerships in this budget."

"Our budget process lacks innovation and is just a continued pattern of building on stale thinking," Nason charged.

Charleswood-Tuxedo-Westwood's Kevin Klein shrugged off the idea the city was balancing its budget and investing record amounts on infrastructure.

"We are investing in record numbers, but somebody else gave it to us," Klein said, pointing to federal and provincial funding. He also called the budget process non-inclusive and his residents "weren't being heard" on issues such as crime and recovering from the economic fallout of the pandemic.

Bowman defended the transparency of the budget process telling reporters there was "unprecedented access to financial information" for all councillors, and they could involve themselves by introducing "thoughtful" amendments.

At the break before the votes were tallied, Bowman told reporters everyone's vote on council "is equal, including my own."