The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Nova Scotia MLA critical of MacLauchla­n’s comments

PC Party leadership candidate John Lohr disagrees with Premier Wade MacLauchla­n’s statement on Northern Pulp mill in Pictou County

- BY SAM MACDONALD THE NEWS

A leadership candidate for Nova Scotia’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves has expressed his support for Northern Pulp and is condemning remarks this past week by P.E.I. Premier Wade MacLauchla­n.

“Northern Pulp is a key employer in Pictou County,” said John Lohr in a statement he released Wednesday, “and their business keeps over 11,000 jobs related to our province’s forestry industry alive from Cape Breton to Yarmouth.”

Lohr noted that Northern Pulp is the largest exporter at the Port of Halifax, shipping an average of 300 containers weekly.

The Kings North MLA contended that the Stephen McNeil Liberals put 11,000 jobs at risk when it “unilateral­ly announced the closure of (Northern Pulp’s) current effluent treatment facility by 2020.”

In his statement, Lohr also specifical­ly criticized the premier of P.E.I. for his disapprova­l of Northern Pulp’s new proposed effluent treatment facility and for requesting a more comprehens­ive assessment to specifical­ly look into the impact a pipeline releasing effluent into the Northumber­land Strait would have on Prince Edward Island fisheries.

There currently is a Level 1 environmen­tal assessment summer.

MacLauchla­n released a statement on Jan. 23 expressing concern that the proposed pipeline “could have unintended consequenc­es for our commercial fishery and aquacultur­e industries,” and that the proposed replacemen­t facility “is not a project that our government will support as proposed.”

Lohr criticized MacLauchla­n’s stance as one that would “slow the process down further,” in his request for Federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna to impose a more thorough environmen­tal assessment.

“This political interferen­ce would put the entire project in jeopardy because it would likely push constructi­on of the new facility past the 2020 deadline,” said Lohr.

“If the P.E.I. premier is allowed to dictate environmen­tal policy in Nova Scotia, then I call upon Premier McNeil to at least extend his unilateral deadline.”

Lohr indicated that it’s incumbent upon the premier to “assure the thousands of hard-working Nova Scotians in the forestry industry that they will continue to have a job.”

Lohr added, “If no one on the government side is willing to stand up for hard-working Nova Scotians, then I will.” planned for this

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