Saint John council signs $216M water treatment deal - Action News
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New Brunswick

Saint John council signs $216M water treatment deal

Saint John councillors were in a celebratory mood Monday night at a ceremony to mark the signing of a $216-million contract that will see the design, construction and operation of the city's new water treatment system turned over to a public private partnership.

Mayor Mel Norton says federal, provincial governments expected to cover 50% of cost in P3 project

The $216-million water deal was signed on Monday at a Saint John council meeting. The signing event included, from left, Mayor Mel Norton, cabinet minister and local MLA Ed Doherty, Will Chow, the project director for Brookfield Financial Securities and Saint John MP Wayne Long. (Connell Smith)

Saint John councillors were in a celebratory mood on Mondaynight at a ceremony to mark the signing of a $216-million contract that will see the design, construction and operation of the city's new water treatment system turned over to a public-private partnership.

"Welcome to a council meeting that is 230 years in the making," announced Saint John Mayor Mel Norton before reading a lengthy proclamation on the water deal which was promptly approved by council.

Port City Water Partners is a consortium of eight companies led by Brookfield Financial Securities LP.

The group includes Spain's Acciona Aqua, North America Construction, SIMO Management Inc, two engineering and consulting firms, AMEC Foster Wheeler, and Stantec, and two local Irving-owned companies, FCC Construction and Gulf Operators.

In recent years city residents have endured numerous boil orders and water main breaks.

Council's top priority

City council had made the provision of safe, clean drinking water its top priority.

Welcome to a council meeting that is 230 years in the making.- Mel Norton, Saint John mayor

The project will feature a water treatment plant with a capacity for 75 million litres per day along with the construction or replacement of 20 kilometres of piping.

As part of the arrangement, the water treatment system for west Saint John will be upgraded,but will continue to be operated by municipal employees,rather than by the private consortium.

Norton said he expects the federal and provincial governments to pick up "roughly" 50 per cent of the construction costs, although that has yet to be finalized.

"They've agreed to contribute up to one half of the eligible project costs," said Norton.

A municipal report released to city council on Mondaynotes the final funding agreement with the federal Crown corporationP3 Canada will be concluded "over the next few weeks" based on the eligible costs of the project.

The report says the $216 million price tag is $40 million less than one estimate provided to the city in March2013.

It also says a "value for money" analysis estimates the project would cost $24 million more had the city not used a P3 model and opted for the traditional approach of the municipal, provincial and federal governments each providing one-third of the funding.