Truro News

Road safety

N.S. to twin major stretches of highways

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The Nova Scotia government’s decision Wednesday to commit $390 million over seven years to improve highways was welcomed with relief by the chief of a small rural fire department in the province’s northeast.

Among the three sections of 100-series highway to be twinned beginning in 2018 is a 38-kilometre stretch of Highway 104 near Barneys River, which has seen at least 15 fatal collisions and 372 accidents since 2009.

Joe MacDonald, chief of the Barneys River Volunteer Fire Department, said the announceme­nt by Transporta­tion Minister Geoff MacLellan would not only save lives, it would also help relieve the burden placed on his small cadre of volunteers.

“We’ve experience­d our fair share of those numbers, probably more than the other department­s, and it runs our volunteer firemen to the brink,” said MacDonald. “It will help save us and retain members.”

The funding, announced in advance of an expected election campaign, will also see the building of the four-lane Burnside connector between Burnside and Bedford in suburban Halifax.

The announceme­nt came after nearly two years of study on the possible use of tolls as a means of paying for the work.

But MacLellan said feedback from 14 public meetings made it clear tolls weren’t wanted.

“Now it’s definitive. Nova Scotians are not interested in toll highways, but they want us to build twinned highways as quick as we can to the capacity that we can.”

The twinning projects include:

• Highway 101, Three Mile Plains to Falmouth, including the Windsor Causeway (9.5 kilometres) at an estimated cost of $90 million

• Highway 103, Tantallon to Hubbards (22 kilometres) at an estimated cost of $140 million

• Highway 104, Sutherland­s River to Antigonish, including Barneys River (38 kilometres) at an estimated cost of $285 million

The funding includes $30 million for safety improvemen­ts for highways not being twinned. That work involves improving grades at intersecti­ons, adding passing and climbing lanes and

adding turning lanes.

Grant Feltmate, executive director of the Nova Scotia Road Builders Associatio­n, said the new plan was good news for the province.

“A lot of that work is going to be done in rural Nova Scotia,” said Feltmate. “For that amount of money, probably over the total duration of that work, I would guess something in the order of 3,000 good paying jobs.”

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 ?? FILE ?? There have been many fatal accidents on this stretch of the Trans Canada Highway 104 in Pictou County between Exits 27 and 29 over the last five years.
FILE There have been many fatal accidents on this stretch of the Trans Canada Highway 104 in Pictou County between Exits 27 and 29 over the last five years.

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