Government moves forward with school repair funding; asks boards to submit funding requests - Action News
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Toronto

Government moves forward with school repair funding; asks boards to submit funding requests

Ontario is asking school boards across the province to submit funding requests for their most pressing repair projects as it restarts a key school infrastructure program that has been frozen for more than a year.

Ontario's schools had a $15.9B capital repair backlog in 2017, the last time data was released

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said Monday the province will begin accepting funding applications for its 2019-2020 Capital Priorities program. (CBC)

Ontario is asking school boards across the province to submit funding requests for their most pressing repair projects as it restarts a key school infrastructure program that has been frozen for more than a year.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said Monday the province will begin accepting funding applications for its 2019-2020 Capital Priorities program and is asking school boards to submit their top 10 capital projects for consideration.

The funding which must be spent by 2023-2024 is to be used for projects such as building new schools or upgrading dated facilities.

Ontario's schools had a $15.9 billion capital repair backlog in 2017 the last time the province released the data to the public.

Cathy Abraham, president of the Ontario Public School Boards' Association. (OPSBA)

Lecce said the government has to do more to address the repair backlog and has pledged to spend $13 billion over the next decade.

"I recognize there's real challenges for boards," he said.

"We're providing predictability and certainty for boards to access those funds and we think that's going to help them measurably to reduce the backlog and improve the state of schools in Ontario."

'School boards were waiting, and waiting and waiting'

The president of the Ontario Public School Boards' Association said the announcement is welcome news because boards have been putting off necessary work as they waited for the funding over the last year.

"There's always things you look at as a school board and say 'we know this work needs to be done but ... we're going to put it aside until next year,"' Cathy Abraham said. "The problem with this funding freeze was that next year didn't come."

Krista Wylie, the co-founder of advocacy group Fix Our Schools, said it's not clear why it took the Progressive Conservatives 13 months to re-start the annual program which had existed under the previous Liberals government.

"I know school boards were waiting, and waiting and waiting," she said. "This is awesome news, for sure, but this is not some brand new windfall. It's this government finally picking up a process that's been lagging for over a year."

NDP Education critic Marit Stiles said the government commitment to spend $13 billion over a decade is billions less the Liberal government committed over that same time period.

"Doug Ford's plan touted by Education Minister Stephen Lecce today is a $3 billion cut to the school building and repair fund over the next 10 years," she said in a statement. "Doug Ford is taking even more away from Ontario's students."