SARM, highways ministry to spend $46 million on rural road infrastructure
The Saskatchewan Ministry of Highways and the Saskatchewan Associations of Rural Municipalities (SARM) plan to spend $46 million on bridge, road and culvert projects in rural parts of the province.
The Rural Integrated Roads for Growth program will contribute up to 50 per cent of the costs of the rural road infrastructure projects, up to a maximum of $500,000 for a road and $1 million for a bridge or large culvert. The highways ministry is chipping in $16.9 million, while the remainder of $29.1 million, will be funded by SARM, which also administers the program.
So far, 41 projects have been approved under the program.
“Saskatchewan’s rural road network is the starting point for many agricultural products and other goods on their way to destinations throughout the province, across the country and around the world,” Kim Gartner, Saskatchewan’s highways minister, said in a statement.

