Cape Breton Post

Mayor wants to join Quebec

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The mayor of a small town in southern Labrador says he has grown so frustrated with the potholes in the Trans-Labrador Highway that he is openly advocating for his town to become part of Quebec.

“All we’ve got to do is move the border, pave our roads and we’re there,’’ Hedley Ryland, mayor of L’Anse-au-Loup, said in an interview Monday.

He has taken part in a series of roadside protests, which on Monday included blockades of the local highway maintenanc­e depot and the office of the area’s member of the legislatur­e.

“We won’t drive in the night time when it’s dark and there’s fog,’’ Ryland said. “We’d be down in a pothole, and have blowouts ... It is absolutely dangerous. It is not a road issue now. It is a safety issue.’’

During this past weekend, about 100 local protesters gathered along the highway near the Quebec border, where they delayed all commercial vehicles as police looked on, he said.

“This is just a start,’’ the mayor said. “We’re going to continue until we get answers.’’

Photos taken Monday from outside the constituen­cy office of Lisa Dempster, the Liberal member for Cartwright-L’Anse-auClair, show a handful of protesters standing next to hand-painted placards. One of them reads: “Power of the people is stronger than the people in power.’’

Ryland said there are so many holes along a 44-kilometre section of the highway that local garages are making a fortune repairing bent rims and damaged suspension­s.

The province recently committed to fixing an 11-kilometre section, but Ryland said the protests won’t stop until Premier Dwight Ball agrees to fill the holes along a 20-kilometre portion that stretches from the Quebec border to Ryland’s community of 700.

“We said 11 kilometres is not enough,’’ he said, adding that the extra work would probably cost about $1 million. “We’re being treated as second-class citizens.’’

Transporta­tion Minister Al Hawkins could not be immediatel­y reached for comment. However, a spokeswoma­n for the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador government said provincial officials met with local representa­tives on July 10 to explain how the province would deal with the most “troublesom­e’’ stretches of the highway.

Ryland said he’s in favour of having his town join Quebec because the highway on the other side of the border is in much better shape — and most of the area’s health care and shopping needs are already handled in the neighbouri­ng province.

The 60-year-old mayor, who has lived in L’Anse-au-Loup all his life, said there is a five-year plan in the works to pave the Trans-Labrador Highway, from the Quebec border to Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

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