North

Iqaluit's 'Waterless Wednesdays' saved more like $62K in 7 months

Cutting water delivery one day a week delivered significant savings, says the city's John Mabberi-Mudonyi, if you factor in savings on fuel and maintenance.

Savings came from casual salaries, overtime, fuel and maintenance

John Mabberi-Mudonyi is the City of Iqaluit's director of corporate services. (Kieran Oudshoorn/CBC)

Cutting water delivery one day a week delivered significant savings, says the city's John Mabberi-Mudonyi, if you factor in savings on fuel and maintenance.

The city's director of corporate services attempted to provide a fuller picture of the savings generated through "Waterless Wednesdays" at a city council meeting Tuesday.

In all, Mabberi-Mudonyi said the city spent about $61,964 less during the seven months of waterless Wednesdays than it did during the same period of time the previous year.

About $38,039 of that came from fuel and maintenance costs; about $23,923 was saved on casual salaries and overtime.

A CBC story last week noted that the city had saved about $10,000 in salaries in the same time frame.

In his presentation Tuesday, Mabberi-Mudonyi told councillors why that figure included costs it shouldn't have. 

"In the previous table we had permanent salaries, but permanent salaries are really irrelevant," he said. "You are going to pay permanent salaries whether you deliver water on Wednesdays or not."

Regardless of the savings, city council is not planning to bring back waterless Wednesdays. 

The program was suspended on April 27, and the city's public works committee has said it won't be back anytime soon.