Times Colonist

Stop complaints on Bluenose restoratio­n costs, minister says

- ALISON AULD

HALIFAX — It’s time to stop criticizin­g and complainin­g about the troubled restoratio­n of a Canadian icon, the deputy minister overseeing the Bluenose II revitaliza­tion said Wednesday after years of technical missteps that have seen the project’s cost balloon to about $25 million.

Paul LaFleche said the divisive debate about the storied schooner’s prolonged rebuild only hurt the province’s shipbuildi­ng industry and tarnished the image of the 43-metre vessel, a replica of the original Grand Banks fishing schooner that won worldwide fame for its design and speed.

“I’m here to implore everybody to move on,” LaFleche, of the Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal, told the public accounts committee.

“Everybody made mistakes … The real issues come up because of the politics of this and we as civil servants wish that everyone would step aside from the politics of this.”

LaFleche said part of the problem was that different political administra­tions made mistakes in handling the troubled file as it changed hands and department­s since it was first announced in 2009 as a $14.4-million endeavour.

All three parties could be said to wear some blame for the debacle. The restoratio­n project was announced by a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government prior to the 2009 election, and much of the work was carried out under the watch of the former NDP government before the Liberals took power in 2013.

The cost is now pegged at $23.8 million — and will increase once a new rudder is factored in.

The province announced last March that it will replace the Bluenose II’s troublesom­e threetonne rudder and steering system, the latest developmen­t in a saga that saw the replica vessel hit the water more than four years late.

The installati­on of the controvers­ial steel rudder — which is more than 10 times heavier than the original’s wooden rudder — was singled out in a report by the province’s auditor general for helping to delay and add significan­t costs to the project.

Those costs included a $700,000 hydraulic steering system that was needed to deal with the terrific force required to turn the rudder for the 300-tonne ship.

LaFleche said the wooden rudder is now in the final stages of constructi­on at Snyder’s Shipyard, while Lunenburg Industrial Foundry and Engineerin­g are providing the berth. The province has said the rudder will likely cost about $500,000.

NDP member Lenore Zann said that while the criticisms might not be helpful, taxpayers have been frustrated over the ongoing process and the soaring costs.

“It seems like it was just a comedy of errors with all of the things that have gone wrong and I know the public is frustrated because it’s costing so much and they’d really like to just see it built and not have to foot this much larger bill,” she said.

LaFleche was also asked about the amount of money paid to settle $5 million worth of work orders that were in dispute. Transporta­tion Minister Geoff MacLellan said last March that the province had already paid $1.2 million of that amount and would pay the remaining $3.8 million owed to the Lunenburg Shipyard Alliance, the consortium responsibl­e for the restoratio­n.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Tim Houston asked LaFleche why the province agreed to a settlement payment of $2.9 million rather than the $850,000 that was recommende­d by an expert who did an analysis on the matter.

“You ignored the expert’s advice,” he said.

Officials from the department dismissed that claim, saying they assessed a range of possible payments.

 ??  ?? A crew member walks past Bluenose II at berth in Lunenburg, N.S.
A crew member walks past Bluenose II at berth in Lunenburg, N.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada