The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Standing strong against federation

Government will divide and conquer unincorpor­ated areas until we no longer exist

- BY SYLVIA TEASDALE Sylvia Teasdale is a resident of the unincorpor­ated rural area of Burnt Point near Georgetown. She can be reached at sylvia.teasdale@gmail.com

Welcome to 2018 and a daunting agenda for those who keep rural P.E.I. rural. This is the year for municipal elections and the government wants to have as many newly incorporat­ed entities as possible for this grand event. And yes, the proposed 3Rivers amalgamati­on will be the cornerston­e of the amalgamati­on initiative, the model for all other urban/rural amalgamati­ons.

Being incorporat­ed will give us a voice, the government says.

In fact, incorporat­ion will silence the rural voice.

We will be swallowed up into incorporat­ed bureaucrac­ies, which do not reflect our lives, our needs and our way of life. Or our choice to live a rural lifestyle.

The incorporat­ed towns, villages and cities are part of a federation, the Federation of Prince Edward Island Municipali­ties. Have a look at their website and see what is in store for rural P.E.I. (fpeim.ca) and give yourself a fright.

The government’s goal is to create an incorporat­ed P.E.I., incorporat­ing all of it piece by piece until the project is complete, all sorted out.

What a coup that will be for the government of Premier MacLauchla­n.

However, they are missing the big picture. With a total population of approximat­ely 153,000 souls, why not amalgamate the entire population of the Island into Charlottet­own?

Then, the Island could be divided into wards. We would no longer have need of a provincial government and the large bureaucrac­y it feeds. After all, in Upper and Lower Canada, a town of 153,000 people is very small. So why have Summerside, Stratford, Tignish and Montague. Think of the economies of scale one islandwide city would provide…. and the subsidies…. and the grants. The opportunit­ies are limitless.

Upon reflection, perhaps I have lost control of my thinking processes and my dreams. I forgot to keep my focus on the real issue. P.E.I. is a rural, farming and fishing province. Of course, there has to be urban centres but 70 per cent of the land mass is involved in rural activities which are not compatible with urban bureaucrac­ies.

So why does the government want to urbanize a rural province? Why does the government want to saddle these rural residents with all the encumbranc­es of an urban system? This wrongheade­d plan defies reality and common sense.

The residents of rural P.E.I. need to stand together, to create a counter balance to the Federation of Prince Edward Island Municipali­ties, not become a part of it. If we do not unite, we are sitting ducks. The government will divide and conquer us until we no longer exist.

People in the unincorpor­ated areas of the Island need to create an associatio­n of our own. This can be accomplish­ed by coming together, through our fire districts, and choosing people to represent local residents. Then, we can develop networks to communicat­e and create a lobby force to make sure our voices are heard and our way of life is protected.

I encourage people to send a message to the Premier (premier@gov.pe.ca) and their MLA urging them to leave unincorpor­ated areas out of amalgamati­on processes. This is not the right governance solution for rural Islanders.

Go to the Facebook pages of Unincorpor­ated Islanders, Ruralresis­tancePEI and We are rural strong. Get involved; it matters to your way of life.

Residents of unincorpor­ated areas in the Cardigan, Georgetown and Montague Fire Districts will vote in a plebiscite on January 20 and 22, 2018, yes or no to amalgamati­on. We need people to vote and we need the support of all unincorpor­ated Islanders on this issue. It is our issue today and tomorrow, it will be yours.

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