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Portage and Main reopening clears another hurdle at Winnipeg city council

- Bartley Kives

Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham's plan to reopen Portage and Main to pedes‐ trians cleared another hur‐ dle on Tuesday, despite concerns raised on behalf of businesses who rent space below the intersec‐ tion from the city.

City council's executive policy committee voted 5-1 to approve a Gillingham mo‐ tion to reopen Portage and Main to pedestrian­s by July 1, 2025.

Coun. Jeff Browaty (North Kildonan) voted in opposi‐ tion.

Gillingham moved the motion in the wake of a prop‐ erty department report that estimated the repairs re‐ quired at Portage and Main to protect the circular walk‐ way below the intersecti­on would require four to five years of traffic disruption­s, delay the start of a new Win‐ nipeg Transit system and cost $73 million.

Gillingham's plan would close the city-owned Portage & Main Circus, the circular walkway below the intersec‐ tion, which requires addition‐ al funds for repairs of its own.

After the mayor unveiled his plans earlier in March, Portage and Main property owners Richardson and Sons, which owns the Richardson Building, and Harvard Devel‐ opments, which owns 201

Portage Ave., both expressed support for reopening the in‐ tersection above ground to pedestrian­s but reserved comment on closing the pedestrian crossing below it.

Kate Fenske, the executive director of the downtown Winnipeg Business Improve‐ ment Zone, told executive policy committee that while many downtown business owners support reopening the intersecti­on above ground, at least five out of the six businesses that rent space in the city-owned un‐ derground walkway are con‐ cerned.

"The majority have been running their shops in what the city calls the circus for years, some of them for decades," Fenske said as she appeared in delegation at city hall on Tuesday morning.

"Decommissi­oning the undergroun­d would have a huge impact on their liveli‐ hoods and could also impact the success of other busi‐ nesses connected to the city owned portion of the under‐ ground.

"I've also heard from em‐ ployers and employees who rely on the connected under‐ ground and skywalk to get between meetings and even‐ ts during the winter and as a result, make up the valuable

customer base supporting the small businesses in the network that was created by the city."

Fenske said she under‐ stands she is asking to have a cake and eat it as well.

"But it's worth an ask," she said. "Opening the inter‐ section at Portage and Main to pedestrian­s is absolutely a priority, but Winnipeg's Un‐ derground is so much more than just an intersecti­on."

Gillingham said there is no timeline for closing the Portage and Main circus and said he's open to hearing fur‐ ther from them as well as Portage and Main property owners.

"Part of our commitment is to be in discussion with the property owners and busi‐ nesses to try to find a way to assist them," the mayor said during a break in Tuesday's EPC meeting.

"Again, the decommis‐ sioning wouldn't happen im‐ mediately. It would take time for that to play out, so it's time for dialogue with busi‐ nesses."

The mayor's office said the six property owners in the city-owned concourse five retail stores and one of‐ fice - generate a combined $111,000 in annual rental revenue for the city. The total cost of operating the circus is just over $1 million, for an annual operating loss of $965,000, Gillingham spokespers­on Colin Fast said.

Progress on Bay revital‐ ization

EPC also received an update on Tuesday from the Southern Chiefs' Organiza‐ tion, which is in the process of transformi­ng the former

Bay building in downtown Winnipeg into a mixed-use project called Wehwehneh Bahgahkina­hgohn.

SCO chief operating of‐ ficer Jennifer Rattray said the removal of hazardous waste is proceeding within the building and the public should be able to see signs of progress this spring.

"We have less asbestos than one could anticipate with the building of that size, but still it's in some pretty tricky places," Rattray said during a delegation to EPC Tuesday morning.

"So that work is a little bit time consuming, but we do believe that there will be a visible representa­tion of the next phase of work in May, June and our hope is to have a celebratio­n around the 100th anniversar­y of the building."

Rattray is a CBC board member, currently on leave.

EPC voted to waive an es‐ timated $257,000 worth of disposal fees on hazardous materials removed during the Bay's redevelopm­ent.

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