Design complete, price tag reduced for road to cut-off First Nation
WINNIPEG — An isolated reserve near the Manitoba-Ontario boundary has cleared what might be the last major hurdle to getting a much-needed road to connect the community to the outside world and secure safe tap water and other infrastructure.
Officials with Shoal Lake 40 First Nation received final design plans Friday for a 24-kilometre, all-weather road along with a projected price — $33 million — that is much lower than recent estimates.
“We’ve been looking forward to this day for some time,” Chief Erwin Redsky said.
Shoal Lake 40 residents were moved off their land onto a peninsula a century ago during construction of an aqueduct which sends fresh water to Winnipeg. Construction created a man-made island and cut them off from the mainland.


