The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Willow Avenue to lose about 20 parking spaces

- BY ALYSHA CAMPBELL BY SUEANN MUSICK

Around 20 parking spaces are being eliminated from Willow Avenue in Summerside.

When Summerside City Council met Monday, it revisited an original motion to remove five parking spaces, which was quickly amended by Coun. Tyler Desroches to include 15 more.

“I spend a lot of time there; I see the vehicles travelling, and I see near misses,” he noted.

Numerous residents, as well as a security company, JC Security, that works in the area, have complained about the dangers.

“Right from the start, there should have been a crosswalk there,” said Desroches.

Originally, the proposed removal of five spaces, two to the east of 511 Willow Ave. and three to the west wasn’t enough, he said.

If Hilton, the great white shark, makes his way to the Northumber­land Strait, he could have lots of company, says a Department of Fisheries shark expert.

Warren Joyce with the Nova Scotia Department of Fisheries said there was much media attention about the great white shark spotted in the gulf region off Nova Scotia, and there is a possibilit­y he could swim into the Northumber­land Strait.

“There is a chance,” he said, adding that great whites can cover a good distance in the water. “Most of the time they are cruising around and cover a fair bit of distance.”

Joyce said great whites have been in Nova Scotia waters since the 1920s, but with advances in technology, their presence is becoming more known to the general public.

“You would hear about them every three to five years,” he said, “but with more recent technology and groups that can now give them satellite tags you can track them. There are also more people on the

water now with cameras.”

Hilton, a 600-kilogram great white, was tagged in Mahone Bay earlier this week. It is thought to have been travelling the coast of southern Nova Scotia for the past week and half.

In late July, a 300-kilogram great white shark, named Pumpkin, was detected in Nova Scotia’s Minas Basin as it feasted on an abundance of seals.

In November, a 900-kilogram great white named Lydia was among two tracking off Nova Scotia.

Joyce said a great white 17 feet and two inches long was caught in cod fishing gear off Prince Edward Island in 1983. It drowned after being caught in the gear, was taken to shore and buried before many people knew about it.

He said a great white shark was also spotted in St. Margaret’s Bay in 2016.

“There are 19 different species of sharks in Atlantic Canada waters,” he said. “Literally, there are millions of sharks out there. The white shark has a reputation though partly because of Hollywood and Shark Week on television. It is the top predator in the shark world.”

Joyce said there has never been a shark attack in Canadian waters, but people should still be cautious if they see one.

“Don’t panic and use some common sense,” he said.

“Don’t go swimming alone in the ocean. Don’t go near seal colonies. They usually try to avoid people but they are large wild animals and predatory.”

White sharks are an endangered species and protected by law, he said, meaning that people not allowed to harass or kill them.

 ?? ROBERT SNOW/OCEARCH ?? Hilton, the great white shark, is shown in this undated handout photo on the deck of a research ship.
ROBERT SNOW/OCEARCH Hilton, the great white shark, is shown in this undated handout photo on the deck of a research ship.

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