Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
On the campaign trail Katz on defensive over Veolia contract
Details can't be made public, mayor says
Judy Wasylycia-Leis
MAYORAL candidate Judy Wasylycia-Leis says Mayor Sam Katz is protecting "a foreign company's business interests" at the expense of the Lake Winnipeg watershed because the city has not made public its consulting contract with Veolia Canada.
Katz dismissed the criticism as disingenuous campaign posturing from a former MP and MLA who knows government contracts with private entities are never made public.
On Sunday afternoon, Wasylycia-Leis invited reporters to her Portage Avenue campaign headquarters to demand the mayor release details about a city consulting contract with Veolia, the company chosen to help Winnipeg's new water, sewer and power utility conduct $615 million in improvements to two of the city's sewage-treatment plants.
The contract was approved by council in May and has yet to be signed. It can't take effect until Winnipeg creates its new utility -- which won't happen until the province develops regulations to govern the new utility.
Nonetheless, Wasylycia-Leis said the public must be able to scrutinize the Veolia deal to ensure the environment and the city's financial interests are protected.
"We're talking about locking the people of Winnipeg into a secret deal for the next three decades. Backroom deal-making that compromises public oversight of our water should have no place in the city," she said in a prepared statement.
The Veolia deal has nothing to do with water treatment. The city intends to use the firm's expertise to reduce the probability of cost overruns during the construction of new treatment facilities at the North End and South End water pollution control centres, which are components of the city's ongoing $1.8-billion wastewater upgrade.
In 2007, cost overruns at the West End sewage-treatment plant were blamed in part on a lack of communication between designers and project managers.
As a result, the city wants to place consultants in the same offices as utility staff.
Utility project manager Bryan Gray has said no more than 15 Veolia employees will work with the city at any given time over the course of a 30-year contract, which may end at any time.
But Wasylycia-Leis said the city is being secretive about the precise duties Veolia staff will conduct. She called on the mayor to make the Veolia contract public or at the very least make the company's role completely clear.
Katz said Wasylycia-Leis knows there's no way confidential information can be made public, given her years of experience as an NDP MP and MLA.
"I understand it's campaign time, so my opponent will resort to criticism instead of solutions or new, creative ideas and there is nothing that her political machinery says that surprises me," he said.
The mayor said the city is interested in doing whatever it can to improve the Lake Winnipeg watershed and that includes lobbying the province to make phosphorus removal, not nitrogen removal, a wastewater-treatment priority, as leading freshwater scientists have suggested.
Wasylycia-Leis said she has yet to develop a position on nitrogen removal.
Winnipeg voters go to the polls on Oct. 27.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition August 30, 2010 B1
-
WFP Hockey
Download our new hockey app for the iPhone for Winnipeg Jets updates
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins from editor Margo Goodhand
-
Winnipeg Jets
All things NHL on our Jets landing page
-
Twitter
Follow our reporters and our news feeds on Twitter
-
News Cafe
Check out the menu, read our blog posts or get info on coming events
-
Facebook Fanpage
Follow our Facebook Fanpage for story links, contests and special events
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Local
Poll
Most Popular
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- RCMP receptionist told Stobbe wife was dead
- Search is on for man seen leaving the scene where two Alberta Mounties were shot
- City family donates $1 million for endowed research chair in cardiology
- Province rules out reports of cougar in Transcona
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site
- US teen gets life in prison for killing 9-year-old; called the murder "pretty enjoyable"
- Slain woman appears before jury on video
- Census 2011 : Immigrant influx boosts Manitoban population
- CNN's Roland Martin suspended for comments that sparked protest by gays
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- Clothing chain pulls Caterpillar boots to protest closure of London, Ont., plant
- Three winning tickets sold for Friday's $50 million Lotto Max jackpot
- Woman sexually assaulted during noon-hour in Exchange District
- Woman's car stolen at gunpoint at St. Vital mall, police say
- Eleven people killed after truck hits van in southwestern Ontario
- 'This is so silly': Mom and Dad tell story of baby Zade, born on side of Highway 59
- Stobbe said slaying during shopping trip 'strange': sister-in-law
- Tactical squad storms St. Vital house
- Restaurant Dubrovnik may be closed for good
- Do you smoke marijuana?
- Driver dead after SUV goes over Disraeli Bridge
- George Clooney's prank could end Pitt's career
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- Tina Maze strips down to her sports bra to send out underwear message: 'Not your business'
- Clothing chain pulls Caterpillar boots to protest closure of London, Ont., plant
- Minor earthquake strikes near Manitoba
- Car's plunge off Disraeli fatal
- Two children, two women die in fire
- Kate Beckinsale's weight fears over Underworld catsuit
- Harper driven by libertarian ideology, not reality
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site
- Tassimo brewers and espresso packages recalled amid rupture, burn concerns
- Task force to review 2011 flood
- Winnipeg software company ranked top employer
- Pardon application fee to quadruple later this month despite complaints
- Province rules out reports of cougar in Transcona
- OMG! Candy kings back at it
- Lesson about war, power told with Shaw's comic touch
- Easy, economical, healthy soup
- Swedish bunny's sheep herding skills becomes click-monster on YouTube
- League encourages hazing secrecy
- Northern fishing lodge destroyed by fire
- Police target drivers talking on cellphones, texting
- Harper driven by libertarian ideology, not reality
- Obama torn by conflicting allies
- 'This is so silly': Mom and Dad tell story of baby Zade, born on side of Highway 59
- Time, it appears, is on Assad's side
- Woman's car stolen at gunpoint at St. Vital mall, police say
- Bridging the gap between suburbs
- Minor earthquake strikes near Manitoba
- Paddler Starkell was modern-day voyageur
- Driver dead after SUV goes over Disraeli Bridge
- Car's plunge off Disraeli fatal
- Canadian woman 'badly injured' in Mexico, local media report apparent beating
- Winnipeg mother watches as car stolen with child inside
- Swedish bunny's sheep herding skills becomes click-monster on YouTube
- League encourages hazing secrecy
- Local shooting spoofed on SNL
- The cost of calories: It's expensive to eat healthily


You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.