Derecho cleanup to cost city an estimated $50M this year, and it's not over yet - Action News
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Ottawa

Derecho cleanup to cost city an estimated $50M this year, and it's not over yet

The cost of cleaning up after the fatalderechowindstorm in May is expected to reach$50 million by the end of the year, the City of Ottawa's chief financial officer said in a memo Tuesday.

Clean-up and restoration efforts will continue in 2023, Public Works says

City of Ottawa crews seen in late June, removing debris from the May 21 derecho. In an update Tuesday, the city's chief financial officer said the cleanup 'required a tremendous level of dedicated work and co-ordination.' (Jacques Corriveau / CBC)

The cost of cleaning up after the fatalderechowindstorm in May is expected to reach$50 million by the end of the year for the City of Ottawa, its chief financial officer said in a memo releasedTuesday.

The tally comes as thePublic Works department prepares to return to regular operations this Friday after four months of dedicated responseto thestorm that caused widespread damage across the capital an effortdepartmentgeneral manager Alain Gonthier described in a separate Tuesday updateas "unprecedented."

But the work isn't over yet. While the Public Works special response ends Friday, clean-up and restorationwillcontinue in2023 as trees are planted and stumps are removed.

Here's a breakdown of the "unbudgeted" costs incurred, provided bychief financial officer Wendy Stephanson in herTuesday memo to mayor and council:

  • $9 millionso far on the community support centres and wellness visits set up in the immediate aftermath of the storm for 180,000 thousands of residents left without power, tree and organic debrisremoval and disposal, repairing signalizedintersections, and cleaning up downed trees in parks,pathways and forested areas.
  • By the end of the year, that figure is expected to climb to $15.25 million.
  • $4.25 million to repair three pieces of city infrastructure:two road salt storage domes and the roof of a citybuilding.
  • $30 million to restore and repair theheavily damaged Hydro Ottawa network (Hydro Ottawa is a private company but iswholly owned by the city).
A worker is seen during cleanup efforts in Greely on May 24, 2022, just days after the derecho storm. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

City staff began tracking storm-related costs as soon as it hit, Stephanson said, and the costs will be reflected in the Q2 tax and rate updates tabled at a finance and economic development committee meeting in October.

"As clean-up efforts will flow in to 2023, financial pressures are expected to continue into next year," Stephanson's memo added.

650 traffic signs, 175 intersections repaired

In Gonthier'sTuesday update, he said Public Works staff removeddebris from more than 500 parks, repaired about 175 intersections with traffic lights and more than 650 traffic signs, removed about 260 tons of organic waste, and inspected and collected debris including thousands of damaged and destroyed trees along more than 10,000 lane kilometres of roads.

It has also processedabout 75,000 bags of woodchips to give away for free across the city, which ends Fridayalong with the department's specializedstorm recovery effort.

Residents still dealing with storm-related debris can get rid of it throughstandard weekly leaf and yard waste collection, as long as they follow those rules.

The redeployment of staff to deal with the storm's aftermath supersededsome regular maintenance work, including water value and concrete repairs, maintaining catch basins and more, Gonthier's memo added.

Some of that work will have to wait until 2023, as staff are now gearing up for winter operations.

"Although most staff will be returning to regular operations, it will take some time for the department to catch up on these items and we appreciate residents'ongoing support," the memo added.

Removing stumps andplanting trees

Work begins this fallto remove about 450 uprooted stumps on city-owned portions of lawns, and if residents haven't already received letters about that, they will soon, the memo said.Removals will extend into 2023.

Next on the list will be removingmore than 2,000 intact stumps in 2023from spring to fall, as well asplanting trees.

Tree replacementdoesn't happen automatically and doesn'thappen at the same time that stumps are removed. Residents who want to replace downed trees on city-owned right of ways must file a request through the Trees in Trust program.

"Staff are looking at options to expand tree plantings in 2023, including partnership opportunities and support for planting on private property," Gonthier's memo added.

"The city is committed to re-establishing the lost tree canopy by replanting lost city trees."

Mayor has asked province to cover costs

Just days after the storm and with about a week to go before the provincial electionMayor Jim Watson announcedhe had spoken with Premier Doug Ford and was told the province would pay for the entirety of the cleanup.

"He assured me that the full cost of the storm cleanup will be covered by the province. I appreciate that very much," Watson told reporters during a news conference.

Since then, Watsonhas written two letters (in June and July) asking for the city and residents to be granted eligibility for theDisaster Relief Assistance Programand the Municipal Disaster Recovery Assistance Program.

The city isn't quite eligiblefor the municipal recovery program. It's spending an estimated $50 million on cleanupand the threshold is $59 million, or three per cent of the municipal property tax base, Watson's latest letter reads.

But he wrote he's hopeful"that your commitment to our city and its residents still stands, and that your government can modify the criteria or create an alternate program to fulfil this commitment."