Federal funds roll in for community centre upgrades

The Town of Davidson has been earmarked for $29,875 in federal funding, which will go towards upgrades to the electrical system at the community centre as well as the installation of a rooftop heating and cooling unit for the centre.

Gary Edom, administrator for the Town of Davidson, said the federal funding would cover half the costs of improving the wiring system and installing an air-conditioning unit for the centre. He said the total bill has been costed at $59,749 for the improvements with half of this amount coming back to the Town once the upgrades are completed and the progress report and invoices are sent in.

“For the first phase what we are going to do is put a bit of wiring in here,” said Edom. “It’s all kind of outdated and we’re still on breakers. This first phase has to be done by next March…but they are going to pay the full $17,000. Then the second phase, which is going to be (worked on) after April 1 is the air-conditioner for the auditorium and they are going to pay $12,000 towards it, but they’re paying half of the whole thing altogether, which is nice to get.”

The cost of the wiring improvements will amount to $17,050 and must be completed between July 30, 2012, and March 31, 2013. The government, through the Community Infrastructure Improvement Fund, which is delivered through Western Economic Diversification Canada, will cover the whole amount of this work.

The second phase of the project of installing an air-conditioner for the community centre comes at a cost of $42,399, and another $300 for signs. This work must be done between April 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014. The government will cover $12,674 for the air-conditioning improvements and $150 for the signs, totaling $29,874 or half of the total amount of $59,749.

Edom said the Town applied for this funding after Lynne Yelich, minister of state for Western Economic Diversification, announced in Kenaston in early July that $46.2 million has been allocated towards repairs and improvements to existing community facilities in Western Canada over the next two years. He said the funding they are receiving is everything that they applied for.

“The big thing is for the auditorium as it’ll be nice to have air-conditioning in there especially for the summer with weddings,” said Edom. “It gets so terribly hot in there for big functions in the summertime.”

He said the rewiring is a major project that needed to be completed because they are currently having trouble in the kitchen with “throwing breakers” when the coffee machines are turned on.

“We’re going to try adjusting some of that,” he said. “Get some new electrical panels put in, some new breakers and some wiring changed around. It would certainly work better.  We even had meetings in the council chambers where they plug in a bunch of laptops and they throw breakers. We hope to upgrade things, so that’s not a problem anymore.”