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SARM calls for funding to aid disintegrating roads and bridges

Organization says current funding levels are ‘driving our roads into the ground.’
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Rural municipalities in the Saskatchewan are responsible for 164,000 kilometres of roads, Canada’s largest road network.

REGINA — The Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities (SARM) is calling for increased funding for rural roads and bridges. 

These pieces of infrastructure are not only the lifeline for thousands of municipal residents who travel them daily, but they also help drive the rural economy by supporting oil and gas, agriculture, mining and other natural resource sectors, says a release issued by SARM Thursday. Without further aid, the roads and bridges in rural Saskatchewan will continue to deteriorate with significant economic and social consequences, SARM warns.

Rural municipalities in the province are responsible for 164,000 kilometres of roads, Canada’s largest road network. Roads in the province connect the rural population to urban centres, transport essential supplies, export goods and more. These busy roads require regular upkeep, maintenance, and ongoing building and re-building, SARM says.

In addition, RMs are responsible for 1,280 bridge structures. According to SARM, years of use have led to 60 per cent of rural bridges at or beyond their expected service lifespan and needing replacement to avoid safety hazards or disrupting the transportation of goods.

“The Rural Integrated Roads for Growth (RIRG) program provides funding for RMs to support rural road construction, bridge construction, culvert installation and maintaining eligible roads at primary weights. The RIRG program is funded by the Ministry of Highways, administered by SARM, and right now every RM has a laundry list of roads and bridges that are in serious need of repair or rebuild,” says Bill Huber, acting President of SARM.

The cost of building a bridge per square foot increased by 36 per cent between 2010 and 2020 and another 25 per cent between 2020 and 2022. Road construction costs have also increased, resulting in a sharp rise in project withdrawals, deeply impacting RMs, SARM reports. Funding for the RIRG program has steadily decreased over the years from $25 million in 2009-14 to $15 million from 2015-23. While SARM says members were pleased to see a modest increase in funding in the 2024-25 program year (to $17.4 million), funding for this essential program continues to lag behind the great infrastructure needs among the RMs.

"Government’s infrastructure spending must keep up with inflation. The civil construction industry needs and has been asking for a long-term serious commitment to build and maintain our provincial road network,” says Shantel Lipp,president of the Saskatchewan Heavy Construction Association.

“The industry continues to see increased expenses in escalating costs for fuel, materials, and labour, while the base spending on infrastructure capital remains relatively unchanged. Inflationary costs reflected in bid pricing that isn’t adequately addressed through realistic infrastructure funding leads to less projects tendered, which creates further financial uncertainty for the industry, it becomes a vicious circle.”

2024 Provincial Election Priorities

The following are SARM’s key areas of focus for the upcoming provincial election. This release is the second in a series highlighting the rural challenges around each.

  • Infrastructure
  • Health care
  • Policing and crime
  • Agriculture
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