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OTTAWA — The federal government has heeded Premier Brian Pallister’s call to construct a pair of outlet channels to prevent flooding around Lake Manitoba, the Free Press has learned.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 18/06/2018 (2811 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

OTTAWA — The federal government has heeded Premier Brian Pallister’s call to construct a pair of outlet channels to prevent flooding around Lake Manitoba, the Free Press has learned.

In a deal to be revealed today, the federal government will contribute about $250 million, and the province will pay $290 million, to bolster Lake Manitoba and Lake St. Martin flood measures. The cost of the project is $540 million.

Pallister will join Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr at the announcement today in St. Laurent, 90 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg.

Approximatly 60 Evacuees from the 2011 flood left their city based Lake St. Martin First Nation government office on Berry St. in Winnipeg Friday morning and marched to the Federal office on Hargrave St. and the Manitoba Legislative Building. Alex Paul story Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press May 8 2015
Approximatly 60 Evacuees from the 2011 flood left their city based Lake St. Martin First Nation government office on Berry St. in Winnipeg Friday morning and marched to the Federal office on Hargrave St. and the Manitoba Legislative Building. Alex Paul story Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press May 8 2015

In 2011, a devastating flood displaced several communities, swamped farmland, ruined cottages and businesses and cost governments hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation payments. A flood in 2014 added to demands for channels to link the two lakes and improve Lake St. Martin’s connection with Lake Winnipeg.

Currently, the Dauphin and Fairford rivers connect all three lakes, but they don’t have the capacity to handle a large amount of floodwater. The two new outlets will run separately from those rivers.

The project will almost triple the capacity of the existing Lake St. Martin outlet to 11,500 cubic feet per second from 4,000 cf/s. The Lake Manitoba outlet channel will be new and will be able to handle 7,500 cf/s.

Carr will attend the announcement on behalf of federal Infrastructure Minister Amarjeeet Sohi.

The federal funding will mark the first time Ottawa dips into the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, which the Liberals launched in May to build or improve infrastructure that protects from floods, fires and storms. Today’s announcement will account for one-eighth of the $2-billion national fund.

Approximately 60 Evacuees from the 2011 flood left their city based Lake St. Martin First Nation government office on Berry St. in Winnipeg Friday morning and marched to the Federal office on Hargrave St. and the Manitoba Legislative Building. Alex Paul story Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press May 8 2015
Approximately 60 Evacuees from the 2011 flood left their city based Lake St. Martin First Nation government office on Berry St. in Winnipeg Friday morning and marched to the Federal office on Hargrave St. and the Manitoba Legislative Building. Alex Paul story Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press May 8 2015

Ottawa will reimburse Manitoba when it receives a request, though provinces and municipalities tend to leave claims for promised infrastructure funding until those projects are completed.

In April, Pallister wrote to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, asking Ottawa to designate the outlet as an emergency construction project and speed up an environmental review. A month later, the federal assessment agency completed its probe, avoiding a full-blown review that would have delayed construction by months.

The project has been in the works for years, with an access road planned and consultations completed with Indigenous communities.

Residents have largely asked for the flood-prevention project to be built as soon as possible, but others have questioned the proposed route for the Lake Manitoba outlet, out of concern their land would be expropriated.

dylan.robertson@freepress.mb.ca

Lake St. Martin Feature Clint Beardy steps on sand bags as he makes his way to one of the flooded homes on the reserve that is full of toxic mold. Beardy refused to leave his land during flooding last spring and fought hard on his own to save it. He never plans on leaving this land-which he believes belongs to his ancestors and has deep roots-no matter what the band or federal government decide to do. See Alex Paul Story. April 05, 2012 (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press)
Lake St. Martin Feature Clint Beardy steps on sand bags as he makes his way to one of the flooded homes on the reserve that is full of toxic mold. Beardy refused to leave his land during flooding last spring and fought hard on his own to save it. He never plans on leaving this land-which he believes belongs to his ancestors and has deep roots-no matter what the band or federal government decide to do. See Alex Paul Story. April 05, 2012 (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press)
For Story on state of affairs at flooded-out First Nation, Lake St. Martin, three months after population of 725 evacuated to Winnipeg. View from top of unfinished ring dike at Lake St. Martin First Nation shows one of 15 homes still inundated by flood water. Note pond-scum in foreground. Unknown if scum is related to sewage flood that breached dike in June. 110803 - Wednesday, August 03, 2011 - ALEXANDRA PAUL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
For Story on state of affairs at flooded-out First Nation, Lake St. Martin, three months after population of 725 evacuated to Winnipeg. View from top of unfinished ring dike at Lake St. Martin First Nation shows one of 15 homes still inundated by flood water. Note pond-scum in foreground. Unknown if scum is related to sewage flood that breached dike in June. 110803 - Wednesday, August 03, 2011 - ALEXANDRA PAUL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
MIKE.DEAL@FREEPRESS.MB.CA 110506 - Friday, May 06, 2011 - A breached sandbag dike has completely flooded this property on the reserve. Lake St. Martin is facing major longterm flooding issues. Half of the reserve is completely flooded with many submerged driveways and connecting roads. Some houses are completely surrounded by water with breached sandbag dikes. The Chief wants the reserve moved to higher ground and has the province on his side. See Bartley Kives story. MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
MIKE.DEAL@FREEPRESS.MB.CA 110506 - Friday, May 06, 2011 - A breached sandbag dike has completely flooded this property on the reserve. Lake St. Martin is facing major longterm flooding issues. Half of the reserve is completely flooded with many submerged driveways and connecting roads. Some houses are completely surrounded by water with breached sandbag dikes. The Chief wants the reserve moved to higher ground and has the province on his side. See Bartley Kives story. MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
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