Fed up with city council, business owner withdraws offer to donate amber lights for Winnipeg school zones - Action News
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Manitoba

Fed up with city council, business owner withdraws offer to donate amber lights for Winnipeg school zones

A multi-year process at the City of Winnipeg to accept a gift of amber flashing lights for school zones has stymied the potential to the point where he has rescinded the offer.

'They don't really care about children's safety,' says electrical contractor who made offer to install lights

Expert Electric owner Chuck Lewis had a draft agreement to install 480 lights in school zones. The city determined it would need to install 391 more to cover all streets around the school zones, at an estimated cost of almost $1.4 million. (Brett Purdy/CBC)

Chuck Lewis says he's had enough withbureaucracy and politics at Winnipeg's city hall, and is pulling anoffer to install amber flashing lights in Winnipeg school zones.

"It's been going on long and the cost goes up every yearso at some point, you have to just take a step back," Lewis said Thursday.

Theowner of Expert Electric initially made an offer more than five years ago todonate two solar-powered flashing lights in each city school zone.

The city launched a process to examine the proposal and accepted the gift in 2019, but there were many details to sort out in aformal agreement.

A draft agreementwould have seen Lewis install480 units, at a minimum rate of two units per month.

The city eventually determinedsome school zones needed more than two units, and saidit would need to install 391 additional lights,at an estimated cost of nearly $1.4 million.There was no approved budget for the additional lights.

Lewis installed some flashing lights last winter on Bedson Street, to pilot his offer of installing two lights per school zone across the city. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Lewis says he signed an agreement with the city this spring on the donation, but was later told the employee with whomhe'd signed the document had left their job, and it needed to be redone.

He finally threw in the towel on Thursday, when he heard decisions on the donation had been referred to another committee.

"I thought this fall we were rolling this out," he said.

The matter was the subject of much back-and-forth between councillors on the city's property, planning and development committee and members of the city's public service at the committee's Thursday meeting.

Among other issues, concerns were raised about which zones might be equipped first, whether priority would be given to thosethat had higher instances of speeding tickets, how the city would budget for its costs, and whether the property and planning committee was even the appropriate place to discuss traffic and public works issues.

"I would hate to see us lose a willing partner in this," said chair Cindy Gilroy(Daniel McIntyre)before the councillors voted.

That's what happened in the end after the committeevoted three to one in favour of sending the matter to the city's executive policy committee, Lewis withdrew his offer.

Waverely West Coun.Janice Lukes was the lone dissenter in the vote.

"It's been here for two years and I think we really needto make a decision on this," she said.

Lewis, for his part, was fed up with the process.

"This whole thing is about children's safety and not money. And why wouldn't you start rolling out the lights? The only reason they're not, it's about the money," Lewis told CBC News.

The electrical contractor rejected the idea he should stick out the process at city hall, saying his own personal costs had risen beyond what he'dexpected. After several years of trying, he says he saw no end to the delays in getting the project completed.

"You're constantly fighting or trying to wrap your mind around what you can do next to try to get it passed."

Politicians express regret at loss of donation

Coun. Kevin Klein (Charleswood-Tuxedo-Westwood), who had championed Lewis's cause, expressed dismay the donation had been rescinded.

"I'm going to work with Mr. Lewis and others to bring it back in a different fashion and try to find another way," Klein said. "It is really disappointing to see this become political."

In a statement, Gilroy said the loss of the offer was "unfortunate."

Mayor Brian Bowman also expressed regretthrough a spokesperson.

"The mayor has been supportive of accepting the donation and will discuss this matter with his council colleagues, and have more to say after Monday's [executive policy committee] meeting," the statement said.

Lewis says he may consider starting the process again, but not until there isa change of government at city hall.