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School capital projects are planned for 2023-24 at a cost of $260 M

The Manitoba government is improving learning environments for students through a $260-million investment in school capital projects during the 2023-24 school year, Consumer Protection and Government Services Minister James Teitsma and Education and Early Childhood Learning Minister Wayne Ewasko announced on June 28.
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Fort La Bosse School Division office where the Board of Trustees meet and where decisions are made for Elkhorn, Reston, Oak Lake, Virden schools and for two Hutterian Colony schools of Plainview and Boundry Lane.

In Fort La Bosse School Division Virden Junior High School and Elkhorn School received upgrades in recent years. Elkhorn school roofing was replaced in 2019. In VJH the mechanical system was replaced in 2021. No new projects are on the list for FLBSD. Elsewhere throughout the province, many projects are planned, ongoing or already completed.

“With growing communities, Manitoba families need quality schools to meet the education needs of our children and youth,” said Minister James Teitsma.

These investments include more than $90 million for renovations and additions, $104 million for new schools and $66 million for existing infrastructure renewal.

Minister Wayne Ewasko said, “These investments in school capital projects will help our schools give Manitoba children and their families high-quality educational experiences and provide the resources that students need to get the most out of their education.”

School projects that will be in progress in 2023-24 would increase school space by over one million sq. ft. Through additions and new school buildings, the projects will create 375 new classrooms, as well as specialized and multi-purpose learning spaces, such as gymnasiums, libraries and spaces for vocational learning, Ewasko added.

“With immigration and economic growth increasing the need for new and upgraded schools, the local construction industry is ready to provide the province with top-notch learning environments for the next generation to learn and thrive in,” said Ron Hambley, president, Winnipeg Construction Association. “These projects are an investment in the future of our province and will provide hundreds of local jobs during construction.”

Teitsma added that since 2019, the Manitoba government has committed over $900 million in school capital investments, including 14 new schools that are part of the 2019-20 new schools guarantee of which half are complete, open and operating and the remaining seven are in various stages of design or construction, or will be completed in 2023-24. That represents 70 per cent of the original new schools commitment, Teitsma noted.

Nine schools are on track to be completed by 2027 and will be bundled within an innovative public-private partnership delivery model to deliver the best value for Manitobans.

The bundled procurement model, applied successfully in recent years in Alberta and Saskatchewan, will allow the Manitoba government to build the new schools through a single tender and thereby complete the construction faster and with optimal value, Teitsma noted.

 

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