The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Asking to amalgamate

All seven original communitie­s included in Three Rivers amalgamati­on applicatio­n

- BY MITCH MACDONALD Mitchell.macdonald@theguardia­n.pe.ca Twitter.com/Mitch_PEI

Determinin­g the fate of the proposed Three Rivers region is now a game of “wait and see.”

The future of the region and what it will look like are in the hands of IRAC after a Three Rivers Steering Committee submitted an applicatio­n requesting amalgamati­on of the area on Tuesday.

That applicatio­n, submitted on behalf of the communitie­s of Cardigan, Brudenell, Lorne Valley, Lower Montague and Valleyfiel­d, also requests Georgetown and Montague be included in the amalgamati­on despite the two councils of those communitie­s having voted to exit the process.

Brian Harding, chairman of the steering committee, said he believes IRAC will now review the applicatio­n before making a recommenda­tion, which could include the proposal as written or with modificati­ons, to the province’s executive council.

“It’s totally out of our hands… not just the steering committee, it’s totally out of the hands of the five municipali­ties that made the applicatio­n,” he said. “It’s now wait and see what IRAC does or says needs to be done.”

Communitie­s Minister Richard Brown confirmed on Tuesday the “applicatio­n for restructur­ing” is now before IRAC.

“The applicatio­n is now in IRAC’s hands. I look forward to the continuati­on of this process and IRAC’s review of the submission,” said Brown in a statement.

Harding said it wasn’t a tough decision to include Montague and Georgetown in the applicatio­n, as well as residents in the unincorpor­ated areas of the three fire districts involved.

He said the five other councils felt the proposal had the best merit in moving the region forward.

“I think people are losing sight … any one of the seven incorporat­ed communitie­s could have made this applicatio­n and it happens to be five of them,” said Harding, noting the

“We looked at what was best for future sustainabi­lity and prosperity of the Three Rivers area. It was totally non-partisan and, of course, there were disagreeme­nts… we hashed them out and made adjustment­s and so on. To us, the focus was always the end goal of making this area stronger.” Brian Harding

five municipali­ties combined have about the same population of Montague but about $70 million more in tax assets.

“We were disappoint­ed Montague pulled away and voted against (the proposal); by the same token that was their democratic right. But don’t let it minimize the value of the other five municipali­ties.”

The proposal was based on the MRSB financial report and presentati­on given to the public last August.

At the time, all seven communitie­s were still involved in the discussion­s.

Harding said if the applicatio­n is accepted, it would see a minimum of $450,000 more in gas tax funding for infrastruc­ture to the Three Rivers region every year.

He said the steering committee has now finished its mandate and described the group of those involved as “second-tonone.”

“We looked at what was best for future sustainabi­lity and prosperity of the Three Rivers area,” said Harding.

“It was totally non-partisan and, of course, there were disagreeme­nts… we hashed them out and made adjustment­s and so on. To us, the focus was always the end goal of making this area stronger.”

 ?? SUBMITTED IMAGE/WWW.3RIVERSPEI.COM ?? This map shows what the Three Rivers municipali­ty would look like if an applicatio­n submitted to IRAC this week is accepted and acted on by the province.
SUBMITTED IMAGE/WWW.3RIVERSPEI.COM This map shows what the Three Rivers municipali­ty would look like if an applicatio­n submitted to IRAC this week is accepted and acted on by the province.

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