The Guardian (Charlottetown)

West Royalty funding not secured

Infrastruc­ture Canada says no applicatio­ns have been submitted for P.E.I. schools

- STU NEATBY stu.neatby @theguardia­n.pe.ca @stu_neatby

Despite a mid-week announceme­nt touting new upgrades of three Island schools, the province has yet to submit an applicatio­n to Infrastruc­ture Canada for the funding needed to make these improvemen­ts.

Late Tuesday, P.E.I.’s department of Education and Lifelong Learning issued a media statement indicating that constructi­on and capital improvemen­ts to West Royalty Elementary, Eliot River Elementary and Montague Consolidat­ed would be expedited due to federal COVID19 resilience fund.

“In partnershi­p with the federal government and made possible through the new COVID-19 Resilience Stream infrastruc­ture funding, planned expansions and capital improvemen­ts will be completed at Montague Consolidat­ed, West Royalty

Elementary School and Eliot River Elementary,” read Tuesday’s release.

West Royalty Elementary is located in Charlottet­own-Winsloe, a district that is in the midst of a byelection campaign.

But an email from Infrastruc­ture Canada, the federal agency that is administer­ing the COVID-19 Resilience Stream, said no applicatio­n has been submitted for the funds.

“Infrastruc­ture Canada has not received an applicatio­n for the West Royalty Elementary, Eliot River Elementary and Montague Consolidat­ed,” read an email received by The Guardian by a representa­tive of Infrastruc­ture Canada.

The COVID-19 Resilience Fund provides funding for projects in which provincial government­s pay 20 per cent of the costs. The federal government would pay 80 per cent.

Parents have raised issue with crowded conditions in the West Royalty school for years. Last fall, Liberal MLA Gord McNeilly told the legislatur­e that classes are situated in broom closets and change rooms.

West Royalty Elementary did not receive funding for an expansion in the fall’s provincial capital budget, although $20 million of funding was allocated for improvemen­ts at Eliot River and Montague Consolidat­ed. A $4.7 million allotment for an expansion to West Royalty was included in the 2018 capital budget, passed during the tenure of the previous Liberal government. These funds were allocated to other schools last fall.

Liberal MP Sean Casey said he was contacted after Tuesday’s announceme­nt by both Charlottet­own-Winsloe Liberal candidate Zac Murphy and Infrastruc­ture Canada. He said the announceme­nt by the province was unusual as projects involving both federal and provincial dollars are announced jointly, Casey said.

“This was done without the knowledge, consent or involvemen­t of the federal government,” Casey said.

“At a minimum it’s premature. In its worst-case scenario, the breach of the protocol could possibly jeopardize any future applicatio­n.”

P.E.I.’s Transporta­tion, Energy and Infrastruc­ture Minister Steven Myers confirmed that the applicatio­n to Infrastruc­ture Canada has not yet been submitted. Myers said the applicatio­n under the COVID-19 Resilience Stream is in process.

“We have no reason to believe that they won’t approve it,” Myers said in an interview.

“The way it works is, we would pay 100 per cent of the dollars and then we would get the federal funds back.”

Myers could not provide a timeline for commenceme­nt of work on the three schools, but said work would need to be completed by the end of 2021 under the requiremen­ts of the federal fund.

He also downplayed that the Tuesday’s announceme­nt was related to the Charlottet­own-Winsloe byelection. He noted that the announceme­nt included Montague Consolidat­ed and Eliot River, schools not located within Charlottet­own-Winsloe.

“In your bubble of politics there’s always somebody saying this shouldn’t have been announced or somebody wasn’t included,” Myers said.

“We will have a proper federal announceme­nt whenever they come through with the money. Then at that point, Sean Casey, if he’s still elected, will be there.”

The governing PCs would have a slim majority in the legislatur­e if PC candidate Zack Bell wins the byelection.

Liberal candidate Zac Murphy said parents in the district are “frustrated and disappoint­ment” with plans for the West Royalty expansion.

“They just seem to have the feeling that this government doesn’t seem to care about this particular project. It’s been delayed, it’s been cancelled, it’s been re-announced,” Murphy said.

Charlottet­own-Winsloe Green candidate Chris van Ouwerkerk said he was initially happy to hear Tuesday’s announceme­nt about West Royalty. But he said parents are tired of “on-again, offagain” plans for the school.

“It just shows that they’re playing games with this byelection, with schools,” van Ouwerkerk said.

“It’s very important that the voters in district 10 have [a] concrete, real announceme­nt that is not just political trickery.”

The Guardian reached out to PC candidate Zack Bell and NDP candidate Lynne Thiele. Calls were not returned by deadline. The Guardian attempted to reach the principal of West Royalty Elementary but was told by a representa­tive of the Public Schools Branch that they would be “declining interviews.”

 ?? DANIEL BROWN/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER ?? Parents pick up students at West Royalty Elementary School. A funding announceme­nt has raised questions about politiciza­tion about expected improvemen­ts to the school.
DANIEL BROWN/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER Parents pick up students at West Royalty Elementary School. A funding announceme­nt has raised questions about politiciza­tion about expected improvemen­ts to the school.

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