The Telegram (St. John's)

Liberals move to earlier water and wastewater tendering

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K telegram@thetelegra­m.com

The provincial government is calling for constructi­on project applicatio­ns from municipali­ties earlier in the year in an attempt to get funded work underway earlier.

The shifting deadline, and earlier government review, was noted on Thursday during the annual general meeting of the province’s Heavy Civil Associatio­n in St. John’s.

Municipal Affairs and Environmen­t Minister Graham Letto told The Telegram the date for project proposals, including for water and wastewater projects, has been changing in response to comments from municipali­ties, civil contractor­s and individual­s who have been critical of heavy equipment going out too far into the constructi­on season.

“We’ve been criticized for not getting these tenders out early enough,” Letto said, noting the 2019 call for water and wastewater proposals will be even earlier this year than in 2018.

“This year in 2019, we’re even going to move that back further to July. Go out for a call in July. The municipali­ties will have to have their projects in to us by September. Then we’ll do the ranking. And our suggestion­s into Ottawa so that we know before the end of the year what projects will be approved (for 2020),” he said.

“(Municipali­ties) can do the engineerin­g work required over the winter months so that they’re ready for shovels in the ground come May, June.”

The push by the Department of Municipal Affairs and Environmen­t follows the same move to earlier tendering for roads under the Department of Transporta­tion and Works. That department has been trying to line up roadwork, to avoid carryovers on contracts from one year to the next. It’s maintainin­g a five-year plan to indicate what might be available to contractor­s and municipali­ties, for planning purposes.

Heavy Civil Associatio­n executive director Jim Organ says the shifted yearly deadlines and five-year planning is allowing member contractor­s to better manage their capital expenditur­es and staffing.

“(The government) seem to recognize the fact a lot of the tenders have been coming out late in the season in the Municipal Affairs area and they’re looking hard and working hard to try and get them out earlier,” Organ said. “So from an industry perspectiv­e, an industry point of view, that’ll be extremely beneficial to the industry for the same reasons I’ve mentioned with the Department of Transporta­tion.”

The earlier deadlines are also tied to the need for multiple approvals for cost-shared projects. The province wants to try to maximize the flow of federal money for municipal projects under the new Building Canada Fund and other programs.

Meanwhile, Premier Dwight Ball was scheduled to give a separate address to the Heavy Civil Associatio­n at the close of its AGM on Friday night. Ball was to announce some of the early tenders for 2019 roadwork.

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