The Woolwich Observer

Townships talk collaborat­ion on service delivery

Township mayors meet with MPP to discuss cooperatin­g, finding efficienci­es

- BY STEVE KANNON skannon@woolwichob­server.com

Mayors from the region’s four rural townships met January 31 with Kitchener-Conestoga MPP Mike Harris, discussing ways the municipali­ties can work together to find efficienci­es and save money.

The townships had last year agreed to hire a consultant, KPMG, to help them find ways to find common ground on five areas of interest: fire services and emergency management, library services, informatio­n technology and corporate communicat­ions. The $100,000 cost was to be split four ways, drawn from money provided by the province under its Municipal Modernizat­ion Program.

Earlier last month at the Rural Ontario Municipal Associatio­n (ROMA) conference , Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Steve Clark pledged an initial sum of $2.6 million to help municipali­ties identify opportunit­ies for shared services and modernize service delivery. The province is providing funding to 27 joint projects that will help some 130 small and rural municipali­ties.

“We’re really happy to see that Waterloo Region has been chosen to be part of this,” said Harris this week.

Harris met last Friday with the four rural mayors – Sandy Shantz (Woolwich), Joe Nowak (Wellesley), Les Armstrong (Wilmot) and Sue Foxton (North Dumfries) – at the Woolwich administra­tive building in Elmira.

“Taxpayers need their local government to deliver modern, efficient services that show respect for their hard-earned dollars. The service modernizat­ion funding will help our rural municipali­ties in Wellesley Township and will help improve how we deliver services and reduce the ongoing costs of providing those services,” said Nowak in a statement following the meeting.

“The funds allow us to explore opportunit­ies for collaborat­ion, partnershi­p and innovation in the areas of fire services, emergency management, communicat­ion and informatio­n technology,” said Shantz.

While the conversati­on about joint services began among the four townships before the province announced its regional review, funding for the cooperativ­e venture was provided by the province after it decided to drop any prospect of amalgamati­on talks.

In endorsing the joint services review last summer, the townships said they’d hoped to demonstrat­e efficienci­es can be found without reducing the region to a single-tier government from the current system.

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