A $6.7-million, 17,000-square-foot gym addition promised to Winnipeg's Kelvin High School by the former NDP government won't be receiving funding from the province.

On Friday, Education and Training Minister Ian Wishart announced the approval of 72 infrastructure renewal projects across Manitoba, to the tune of around $44 million, but the Kelvin gym isn't one of them.

A sports field rehabilitation project that was slated for Dakota Collegiate has also been dropped.

"There's no more value-for-money than having proper educational infrastructure like a gym where your students can actually have a class you know in a gym as opposed to a hallway and this is anything but that," said Winnipeg School Division trustee Mark Wasyliw.

"This is slash-and-burn cutting."

In a news release, Wishart said the health and safety of Manitoba students and teachers must be prioritized.

The projects going forward include necessary health and safety-related infrastructure upgrades to roofing, mechanical systems and accessibility, the province said in a news release.

Sherri Rollins, chair of the Winnipeg School Division's board of trustees, said she was disappointed and troubled when she learned about the cut in an email late Friday afternoon.

"It's one of the largest high schools in the province, first of all, and second of all, it's impossible for kids to cycle through that gym, right?" she said, adding that the gym doesn't have the space to meet demand.

"If you have any club, they're working in the hallway or they're outside. You can't cycle through the classes that you need to cycle through," she said.

As part of the deal struck with the NDP, the school and community had already raised more than $1 million for the capital costs of the project, Rollins said. She's still hopeful the project will eventually go forward.

"For sure, as a school division, we will stick [the $1 million] back in the five-year plan," Rollins said. "We'll still submit it to the public schools finance branch for consideration. A 'no' you have, a 'yes' you can get."

'Mean-spirited' cuts, NDP education critic says

The cuts have come under fire by NDP education critic Wab Kinew, who said it was "mean-spirited" to axe the projects "at this late stage."

Kelvin already had blueprints and architectural renderings of the planned space.

Kinew noted that some Kelvin students currently have to pay to use outside facilities to obtain their mandatory phys ed credit and urged the Progressive Conservative government to reconsider.

The projects Wishart announced include: