Montreal projects $31.4M deficit, 1st time in red since 2013 - Action News
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Montreal

Montreal projects $31.4M deficit, 1st time in red since 2013

Montreal is projecting a $31.4 million deficit for 2017, mainly due to salary increases in the latest union agreements. If confirmed, this deficit will be a first since 2013.

Mayor Denis Coderre says books will be balanced by end of year

The City of Montreal is forecasting a $31.4 million deficit for 2017, due largely to recently negotiated salary increases for unionized municipal workers. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Montreal is projecting a $31.4 million deficit for 2017, mainly due to salary increases in the latest union agreements. If confirmed, this deficit will be a first since 2013.

However, the books will be balancedby the end of the year, said Mayor Denis Coderre duringa news conference announcing his team of candidates in thePlateau-Mont-Royalborough.

"Don't worry about that," Coderresaid.

Financial statements for the first half of 2017 show the city spent an additional $25 million on policing, $24 million more on firefightersand $16 million more on blue collar workers.

But the city saved $10 million this year in snow removal operations.

Last year, Montreal had a surplus of $139 million.

The mayoral candidate for Projet Montral, Valrie Plante,said the deficit is an example of the Coderre administration's financial mismanagement.

"I know my opponent talked about unforeseen issues in the collective agreements and everything related to working relationships, but I think we can see where the money went," Plante said, reiterating her concern about the cost of the 375th anniversary celebrations, which reportedly cost the city $1 billion.

The price of this summer's Formula E event is said to havecome in at$25 million with an additional $5.3 million approved after the race though organizers say data on the exact cost won't be available until after the mayoral election.

Plantehas committed to establishing an "accountability commission" to avoid cost overruns.

It would be responsible for monitoring major city projects in order to "avoid unpleasant surprises in terms of quality of work and costs," Plante said.

Translated from a report by Radio-Canada