Manitoba

Winnipeg spends 24% of budget on police but plans to hire more tree pruners than officers in 2025

Although Winnipeg spends more money on policing than any other service, the city plans to add more staff in 2025 to libraries, transit and forestry, among other spending areas.

Budget will add 27 transit workers, 24 firefighters, 10 librarians this year, but only 6 patrol officers

A man with a chainsaw in a tree.
Winnipeg plans to add eight full-time equivalent jobs to its complement of forestry workers this year. (Bertrand Savard/CBC)

Although Winnipeg spends more money on policing than any other service, the city plans to add more staff in 2025 to libraries, transit and forestry, among other spending areas.

The preliminary version of Winnipeg's $1.4-billion budget for 2025 calls for the city to hire six more patrol officers this year.

While Mayor Scott Gillingham lauded that move when budget details were released in December, the city actually plans to add more full-time staff equivalents to half a dozen other budget areas.

The city intends to hire more 27 Winnipeg Transit workers in order to expand bus service into newer suburbs and 24 more firefighters to be stationed in Waverley West.

There will also be a net gain of 10 library staff (11 added due to annualizing the 2024 increase in library hours and three more related to opening the new northwest library, offset by a loss of four related to the closure of Millennium Library's Community Connection Space), according to the draft budget document.

The budget also calls for eight more full-time staff equivalents devoted to maintaining trees on city-owned land.

"The city put its money where its mouth is when it comes to trees," said Christian Cassidy, executive director of Trees Winnipeg, a non-profit organization.

"You're going to have more tree pruning, tree removal — which everyone hates but is a necessary evil — and tree replacement."

The end result is Winnipeg is about to hire more people who carry shears and chainsaws than workers armed with pepper spray, batons and firearms.

"I assume it's a little easier to get tree pruners than it is trained police officers," quipped Waverley West Coun. Janice Lukes, who is serving as Winnipeg's acting mayor while Gillingham is on holidays.

City council will scrutinize Winnipeg's 2025 budget at a series of meetings over the next few weeks. Councillors vote on the budget at a special meeting slated for Jan. 29.

Several City of Winnipeg departments to get more new staff in 2025

3 days ago
Duration 1:35
As many Winnipeggers are aware, policing uses up almost a quarter of the city's budget. But when it comes to new hires, police are not the main priority this year.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said 12 more library staff are being added in order to expand library hours. In fact, libraries will see a net gain of 10 staff.
    Jan 04, 2025 11:27 AM EST