The Guardian (Charlottetown)

FORCED BACK

Fishermen opposed to Northern Pulp pipe plan force survey boat to turn around

- BY SUEANN MUSICK

Fishermen opposed to Northern Pulp pipe plan force survey boat to turn around

Fishermen opposed to Northern Pulp’s plans to pump treated effluent into local waters say the company’s new route isn’t any better than the last - and showcased its opposition by forcing a survey boat back to shore.

On Oct. 23 - the day after Northern Pulp met with stakeholde­rs over the proposed new route - fishermen let it be known they weren’t accepting the new proposal by blocking a surveying boat from doing its work.

Pictou County fisherman Allan MacCarthy, who is part of a coalition representi­ng fishermen from Nova Scotia, P.E.I., New Brunswick and Pictou Landing First Nation, says “absolutely no way” to Northern Pulp’s latest proposal.

“This new route is totally unacceptab­le,” said MacCarthy, who fishes out of Caribou Wharf. “Northern Pulp has clearly not been listening. No Pipe in the Strait means this location, too. Seventy lobster boats fish out of Caribou. We fish herring and crab from here, too. Caribou is the largest wharf on the Nova Scotia side of the Northumber­land Strait.”

MacCarthy said he got word Oct. 23 that the survey boat doing work for Northern Pulp’s new outfall was in the water near Caribou, so he left the harbour and met the boat in the channel.

“I went out as a peacemaker and told them that everyone is not going to be as friendly as me,” he said.

“There was a little foolish talk back and forth. But when the other boats started coming out of Caribou, they left the area.”

He said he escorted the boat back to Pier C in Pictou to make sure nothing would happen.

The survey boat tied up Pier C and five fishing boats idled in the water close by watching as people from the surveying boat spoke with RCMP at the pier. By noon, both sides had left the area.

Northern Pulp presented its latest proposed route for the pipe to stakeholde­rs – including the associatio­ns representi­ng fishermen from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, and the Pictou Landing First Nation – on Oct. 22.

The proposal would see effluent piped alongside the causeway running toward Pictou and continue adjacent to the road running to the Caribou-Wood Islands Ferry and then out into the Northumber­land Strait, but it was met with opposition.

The day before that meeting, a leak to the pipe carrying effluent to the Boat Harbour treatment facility on Oct. 21 prompted the provincial environmen­t department to investigat­e.

Remediatio­n work began immediatel­y, with no effluent escaping into the East River. Officials say the spill on Indian Cross Point, about midway between the road and the East River, was confined to a wetland area.

“(Oct. 22), we saw again that Northern Pulp did not know that their effluent pipe was leaking until a citizen reported it,” said MacCarthy. “The same thing happened in 2014 – a 47-million litre raw effluent spill – and that’s on land. It’s unbelievab­le that our government wants us to trust this company with an underwater pipe dumping effluent into our fishing grounds.”

Pictou Landing First Nations Chief Andrea Paul said Northern Pulp had six months to come with a better plan than the last, but it is still focused on putting its treated effluent into the Strait.

“It’s 2018 and we have a bottom line – no more harm to our waters, our fisheries or our communitie­s,” she said.

Northern Pulp has asked fishermen to participat­e in a project advisory committee.

 ?? SUEANN MUSICK/SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? Fishing boats surround a survey boat that was forced to return to Pier C in Pictou Tuesday by fishermen opposed to Northern Pulp’s plans to pump treated effluent into local waters.
SUEANN MUSICK/SALTWIRE NETWORK Fishing boats surround a survey boat that was forced to return to Pier C in Pictou Tuesday by fishermen opposed to Northern Pulp’s plans to pump treated effluent into local waters.

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