The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Central Nova hears from its candidates

- AARON BESWICK THE CHRONICLE HERALD abeswick@herald.ca @CH_ABeswick

Abortion, Northern Pulp and rural broadband access — Wednesday’s candidates forum for Central Nova hosted by the Antigonish and Area Chamber of Commerce didn’t skirt the issues.

Incumbent Liberal Sean Fraser and Conservati­ve George Canyon are in a neck-and-neck race for the historical­ly blue riding.

On Wednesday poll aggregator 338Canada.com had them tied at 37.7 per cent support. Pictou restaurant owner Barry Randle (Green) was in third with 12. 8 per cent and community organizer Betsy MacDonald of the NDP was in fourth with 9.3 per cent of those polled.

People’s Party Candidate Al Muir, who owns Andre’s Pizza and Seats restaurant in Stellarton, had 2.2 per cent.

In their introducto­ry statements the four participat­ing candidate all played the part one would expect in front of an audience of small business owners.

Fraser championed his government’s record of lowering the small business tax rate from 11 to nine per cent, investing in the twinning of Highway 104 from Sutherland’s River to Antigonish and local institutio­ns like the Farmers Market.

Canyon, a Pictou County native and popular country musician, introduced himself to the crowd as a fellow small business person who had worked hard while raising a family and knew their struggles.

Randle, who owns the Stone Soup Café with his wife Denise Davidson, warned that climate change needs urgent action and pointed to his party’s plans to reduce Canada’s carbon emissions by 60 per cent over the next 11 years and to net zero by 2050.

MacDonald shared Randle’s concerns about the climate crisis and added the need to encourage more small scale farming and increase the purchasing power of low income people so they can better participat­e in the local economy.

The hot button topics originated from attendees’ questions.

Asked their position on abortion, the Green, Liberal and NDP candidates all agreed that the government should not limit access to it.

Canyon was the only person to offer any hesitation in his response.

“Attheendof­thedaymy personal opinions are not the issue,” said Canyon.

“The issue is what are the opinions of the residents of Central Nova.”

Asked his personal opinion after the forum, Canyon said he didn’t agree with abortion being used as a form of birth control.

But Canyon said he shared leader Andrew Scheer’s position that Canada’s abortion laws are not something a Conservati­ve government would seek to change.

The candidates diverged further when asked what the impact of closing Northern Pulp would be.

The Pictou County kraft pulp mill will shut on Jan. 31, 2020, unless the province allows the company an extension to use the existing effluent treatment facility at Boat Harbour.

“I’m against running a pipe into the strait and I’m against extending the Boat Harbour deadline,” said MacDonald.

“Northern Pulp has had time to find a solution and that time is running out.”

Randle pointed out the need for an apology and compensati­on to be paid to the Pictou Landing First Nation, which was tricked by provincial officials a half-century ago into accepting the effluent treatment facility beside their community.

Canyon and Fraser, meanwhile, continue to refuse to take a position on whether the province should extend the Boat Harbour Act to allow the mill to continue operating while it builds a proposed replacemen­t for the existing effluent treatment facility.

“The job of a leader is to hear all sides, ... ” said Canyon, noting he has met with fishermen, Northern Pulp pensioners, Pictou Landing Chief Andrea Paul and mill workers. “The extension of Boat Harbour is in the premier’s hands right now.”

For his part Fraser said his “priority is to ensure the marine environmen­t is not put in the path of irreparabl­e harm.”

While the federal environmen­t minister has sought a second opinion from the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada on whether to require a longer federal review of the proposed project, Fraser said it was unlikely a decision would be made on that before the Oct. 21 election.

Not participat­ing in the forum were People’s Party candidate Al Muir and Communist Party Candidate Chris Frazer, a history professor at St. F.X.

 ?? AARON BESWICK THE CHRONICLE HERALD ?? Conservati­ve candidate George Canyon answers a question at a candidates forum held by the Antigonish and Area Chamber of Commerce. Also shown are NDP candidate Betsy MacDonald, left, incumbent Liberal Sean Fraser and Barry Randle of the Green Party.
•
AARON BESWICK THE CHRONICLE HERALD Conservati­ve candidate George Canyon answers a question at a candidates forum held by the Antigonish and Area Chamber of Commerce. Also shown are NDP candidate Betsy MacDonald, left, incumbent Liberal Sean Fraser and Barry Randle of the Green Party. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada