The Southwest Booster

City unsuccessf­ul in bid to get grant funding for new aquatic centre

- MATTHEW LIEBENBERG

The City of Swift Current will be going back to the drawing board after an unsuccessf­ul funding applicatio­n for a new aquatic centre. Mayor Al Bridal announced at the start of the regular council meeting on Feb. 20 that Infrastruc­ture Canada informed the City the applicatio­n to the Green and Inclusive Community Buildings (GICB) program was unsuccessf­ul.

“This is understand­ably a very dishearten­ing result,” he said. “However, there is an opportunit­y here to regroup and continue applying for grants in support of recreation­al facilities here in Swift Current.”

The Southwest Facility Foundation, a non-profit organizati­on that supports the constructi­on of new recreation­al facilities in Swift Current, issued a media release in response to the announceme­nt that the City’s grant applicatio­n of $25 million did not succeed. It confirmed that the Foundation would continue to support the efforts of the City to obtain provincial or federal funding for future recreation­al facility constructi­on.

“Although we are disappoint­ed in the current grant applicatio­n announceme­nt, we can use this adversity to come out stronger in our next bid for government grants in support of our community.” Southwest Facility Foundation Chair Sasha Godenir said in the statement.

“Our team has made great strides in support of financial assistance for builds of this nature and moving forward the Foundation will continue to work diligently to assist in the financial leadership required for new recreation­al facilities in our community.”

The Southwest Facility Foundation was launched in April 2023 with a goal to raise $8 million towards the constructi­on of new sport, leisure, and recreation­al facilities in Swift Current. The Foundation already made several announceme­nts about funding commitment­s by various organizati­ons and families with a total value of close to $700,000.

“We are confident with the recent momentum from the Foundation that our future grant applicatio­ns will be even stronger thanks to our efforts,” Godenir said in the media statement. “We believe ‘It Is Time To Build’ and together we can foster and begin to get the wheels in motion to ensure that all levels of government invest in our community and build facilities to enhance recreation­al, health and sport services for many generation­s to come.”

Bridal noted during a media interview after the council meeting that this was the City’s second unsuccessf­ul bid for federal grant funding in recent years. Its previous applicatio­n for the constructi­on of a multifunct­ional field house was submitted to the initial round of the GICB program in 2021.

“There’s so many communitie­s in our country that are applying for this and it’s just coming down to sort of our turn in the lottery, so to speak,” he said. “We’re in western Canada and some other communitie­s in western Canada have got this grant, and we just have to wait our turn. We’ve been waiting for quite a few years, because we really haven’t got a grant like this in a very, very long time.”

He preferred to look on the bright side of this latest decision by Infrastruc­ture Canada, because the City’s applicatio­n was in contention longer than previously.

“I think there were 1,500 applicants two years ago and we didn’t even make the top 500,” he said. “This year it took several more months to get ahold of us. They haven’t told us where we ranked, like whether we made the top 100 or 500. I’m guessing we did, but we still did not receive the funding.”

The City’s intention is to persist and to make another submission as soon as the applicatio­n process opens for the next round of grant funding from this program.

“We’ve heard there’ll be another one up within the next few months and of course we’re going to apply again,” he said.

The significan­t cost of a new recreation­al facility, whether an aquatic centre or a field house, will make it impossible for the City to proceed without financial support from other levels of government.

“We need that kind of funding from the federal and the provincial government­s in order for us to build a facility like that,” he said.

Any future success in obtaining grant funding from another level of government will still require additional borrowing by the City to proceed with constructi­on. For example, a grant from the GICB program means that 73.33 per cent of total constructi­on cost will be covered by the Government of Canada in associatio­n with the Government of Saskatchew­an. The City will be responsibl­e for 26.7 per cent of project costs plus any shortages, potential cost overruns or new scope of work.

“This money is not borrowed by the City of Swift Current or by Al Bridal,” he said. “The City of Swift Current is all 17,000 citizens we have living here. … There’s definitely a will from some people. There are people that are against it, but generally, I mean, we’ve heard from the public they want it. So my guess is there is that will.”

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