Cape Breton Post

Isthums imperilled

High tides threaten narrow stretch of land that connects province with N.B.

- BY FRANCIS CAMPBELL

Editor’s Note: This story is part of a SaltWire Special Report examining the rising seas around Nova Scotia.

Roger Bacon can reflect on a lifetime of dealing with surging sea water.

The 92-year-old former premier of Nova Scotia remembers as a boy helping his father shore up the dikes near Amherst with a horse and drag sled.

“Wherever we saw a little water, we topped that dike out,” Bacon said. “Other farmers were doing the same thing.”

The dike topping was essential to protect farmland from the tidal water swirling in from the Bay of Fundy. Those worldrenow­ned high tides and storm surges now threaten the lifeline that connects Nova Scotia to New Brunswick and the rest of the country and North America.

That land connection is the isthmus of Chignecto, a narrow strip of land that includes 20 kilometres of Trans-Canada Highway and CN rail, along with 35 kilometres of electric lines and dikes. A spokesman for the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal Department said 14,600 vehicles, including 2,400 transport trucks, travel the corridor between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick daily. The truck and rail traffic transports $50 million in cargo every day, an annual total of $20 billion in trade.

“The transporta­tion link carries almost all of the containers that are landed or shipped from Halifax,” said Bill Casey, member of Parliament for Cumberland-Colchester. “If that were to fail, the Port of Halifax would shut down until it’s replaced. That’s the biggest threat.

“If it failed, the highway would close as well. It’s a very essential transporta­tion link. We’ve got the gas pipeline, we’ve got the highway and the railway. Right now, the only thing that’s holding back the ocean is the railbed.”

Casey said he was told by an emergency measures official in 2015 that the Fundy sea water had surged to within a centimetre from the top of the railbed. He said the United Nations Panel on Global Warming identified the Fundy area as one of the two most vulnerable areas to climate change in North America, the other being New Orleans.

“It would wash out so fast,” Casey said if water tops the railbed. “An endless amount of water would flush through there.”

In danger of being rendered to virtual island status, Nova Scotia teamed with New Brunswick to submit a proposal to Ottawa requesting funding for an engineerin­g study to find out what can be done to mitigate the isthmus predicamen­t. Each province contribute­d $175,000, which the federal government matched, to commission a $700,000 study to determine the best way forward.

Bacon said it’s not complicate­d.

“Those dikes got to be done,” said Bacon, still feisty as he covered issues past and present in the living room of his home on the original Bacon farm in Upper Nappan.

“I think it is the stupidest thing I ever heard that they are going to spend ($700,000) to get a study on how to stop the water from going over the dikes. The answer to the question is build the damn dikes higher, that’s the only way you are going to stop the water.

“This marsh land is so important, it grows hay crops, clover and alfalfa year after year after year. We’ve got to protect it and you’ve got to protect your railway, your highway, your connection to the other provinces.”

The New Democrats agree with the former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve premier. The party says that the provincial government should spend at least $50 million over the next five years to raise and reinforce dikes originally built by the Acadians in the 1700s in the low-lying area along the Tantramar marsh.

Lenore Zann, the party’s agricultur­al and environmen­t critic, introduced a private member’s bill to that effect in the spring session but no action has been taken on it yet.

“There is a time for studies and there is a time for action,” Zann said. “Right now, with climate change and global warming heating up our waters and our air and having the hottest summer with the most consecutiv­e hot days on record in Atlantic Canada, I’d say they’d better get a move on and do something before Nova Scotia becomes an island.”

The province announced in April 2017 that it had completed a $5.2-million project to replace the LaPlanche aboiteau that runs along the isthmus in Amherst. The project, according to the provincial Liberals, will protect about $40 million worth of provincial and municipal infrastruc­ture, drain a 133-square-kilometre watershed and secure 1,000 hectares of agricultur­al marshland from Fundy flooding.

Still, the infrastruc­ture, including road and rail, remains in jeopardy by almost all accounts.

“The rail line is now holding back the ocean and it was never designed to do that,” Casey said.

Zann said the isthmus upgrade has been bounced around long enough.

“I am pretty tired of everybody just tossing the football back and forth, whether it’s provincial, it’s federal or who is going to do what, just get it done.”

 ?? FRANCIS CAMPBELL/ THE CHRONICLE HERALD ?? Doug Bacon, a farmer from Upper Nappan, stands by the $5-million Laplanche aboiteau in Amherst.
FRANCIS CAMPBELL/ THE CHRONICLE HERALD Doug Bacon, a farmer from Upper Nappan, stands by the $5-million Laplanche aboiteau in Amherst.

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