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Kelowna just spent $3.2M on your daily commute

Your City Hall approved what you probably needed

Good morning from the Okanagan — the lake is calm, the vines are growing, and we have things to discuss.

Okay, but here's the thing nobody talks about with City Hall: sometimes they just approve the stuff we actually need, not the wild, headline-grabbing projects. And that's exactly what happened this week with some crucial road improvements.

### Getting Around Kelowna

Our City Council gave the green light to a $3.2 million contract for the rehabilitation of some of Kelowna’s main thoroughfares. This isn't just patching potholes, folks. This is a full-on upgrade for roads like portions of Richter Street, Gordon Drive, and K.L.O. Road. We're talking new asphalt, better drainage, and improved line markings. According to the City's Engineering Services department, these are arterial and collector roads that see heavy daily traffic, especially around peak hours when everyone's trying to get to work or hit Guisachan Heritage Park for a stroll.

It’s about making our commutes smoother and safer, whether you're heading downtown on Bernard Avenue or trying to get across the floating bridge. This funding, approved by council last Tuesday, comes directly from the capital budget earmarked for infrastructure upgrades. So, while it might not be as flashy as a new park, it's the kind of bread-and-butter work that keeps our city moving. Keep an eye out for construction notices in late spring and summer – maybe grab that $18 rosé from Summerland for a picnic while you’re stuck in traffic.

That's The Record for today.

Nina Papadimitriou, MiTL Sports Desk, Kelowna.

The crew on the morning show is digging into this and more — tune in at mornings.live.

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