Tri-County Vanguard

Cat carried 50,185 passengers in 2018

Bar Harbor town council was expected to make decision on Oct. 16 on Cat’s move there from Portland

- BY TINA COMEAU THEVANGUAR­D.CA

A total of 50,185 passengers were carried back and forth between Portland and Yarmouth on The Cat ferry this year, which Bay Ferries says is an increase of 21 per cent from the year before.

The last sailing of the season was Oct. 8.

Bay Ferries has seen its passenger counts go up each year since taking over the route in 2016 when it transporte­d 35,551 passengers. In 2017 The Cat carried 41,623 passengers, which was an increase from the previous year despite having to cancel 25 per cent of its crossings due to an engine issue.

Which U.S. port The Cat highspeed ferry travels to and from next season is the question now being decided on.

The company has been exploring the possibilit­y of sailing to and from Bar Harbor, as it did from the years 1997 to 2009. Bar Harbor town council was expected to decide on Tuesday evening, Oct. 16, whether it would enter into a five-year lease of its terminal facility with Bay Ferries.

(Note to readers: Go online for an update www.thevanguar­d.ca)

Bay Ferries had approached the town in July with a proposal to make the port switch in time for next year’s season. A review of the lease for the Bar Harbor ferry terminal occurred at council’s Oct. 2 meeting. The detailed 14-page lease agreement covers a lot of ground, including spelling out the terms of usage of the property by the ferry operation and also the public, Bay Ferries’ monthly lease payments and a ‘province guarantee’ clause of $1 million US funds from the province of Nova Scotia.

The obligation­s of the town of Bar Harbor, as the landlord, and Bay Ferries, as the tenant, are also spelled out in detail in the lease, which was dated to begin on Dec. 1, 2018.

Cornell Knight, town manager for the Town of Bar Harbor, said last week that the council and Bay Ferries have both put in a lot of due diligence in considerin­g the proposal.

“We have had a very thorough review of the proposal with numerous updates at council meetings and Bay Ferries has been very good to deal with and I think it would be a good decision for the town to enter into the lease agreement,” Knight said on Oct. 12. “The additional revenue would help cover the new debt payments the town will incur to purchase the property from the State of Maine, without impacting property taxes or interferin­g with the town’s plan to develop the rest of the property.”

In early September, Bar Harbor town council held a three-hour public forum to give the public its say on the proposal. Knight says council heard both positive comments and opposition to a lease.

WHY THE SWITCH?

Bay Ferries is looking at the Bar Harbor market for a number of reasons, which, it says, includes tapping into the strength of Bar Harbor as a destinatio­n and the tourism market it provides; uncertaint­y about future availabili­ty of the Portland ferry terminal property; and the opportunit­y to reduce operationa­l costs, particular­ly fuel given that it would be a shorter sailing distance.

In an Oct. 12 media release, Bay Ferries noted that fuel price increases were challengin­g as its 2018 season progressed. The company says it took all possible measures to control the cost, although it didn’t specify those means or the cost.

Bay Ferries has previously told Bar Harbor town council that the ferry company and the province of Nova Scotia would be footing the bill for terminal upgrades and renovation­s. A figure of around $3 million US has been referred to in the past, but that was not a confirmed figure.

NOTICE TO PORTLAND

Bay Ferries has an option to extend its current lease with the City of Portland for an additional season but this option only exists to Nov. 15.

On Oct. 11, Jessica Grondin, director of communicat­ions for the City of Portland, said the city was awaiting the company’s decision.

“They asked us for an extension, until Nov. 15, in order to inform us of their plans for next year,” she said. “We have always been in favor of keeping the connection with Nova Scotia alive, but we do realize there are a lot of factors at play when it comes to our own needs for our waterfront usage and for the needs of Bay Ferries.”

Bay Ferries says to remain in Portland, even in the short term, a commitment would have to be made for constructi­on of a new US Customs and Border Protection (USCBP) facility. The likely cost of that would be is at least $7-8 million.

Over the past few months there have been ongoing discussion­s with US Customs and Border Protection (USCBP) concerning the facilities that would be required if the Bar Harbor ferry terminal was re-opened to internatio­nal ferry service. Bay Ferries says to conduct operations from the Bar Harbor terminal, USCBP must approve facility plans.

Bay Ferries says it has engaged an architect and several engineerin­g consultant­s to assess the cost of the work required to bring the ferry terminal back into operation. The results of this work will soon be presented to the province of Nova Scotia, which has also engaged an independen­t consultant for the process.

“We have hired an independen­t

advisor who is an expert in marine infrastruc­ture to provide third party analyses of potential costs to the province,” said Marla MacInnis, media relations advisor for the Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal. “Costs associated with this work will be no more than $35,000.”

This year the province budgeted $10.9 million as an operating subsidy for The Cat’s season. MacInnis said last Friday it was too early to say what the final subsidy will be for this year and whether the amount while be on budget, higher or lower.

Meanwhile, discussion­s have continued with US Coast Guard, various regulatory and other bodies and the State of Maine concerning a switch to Bar Harbor.

“Ultimately, it will require a positive decision of all of the parties mentioned above (Town of Bar Harbor, USCBP, Bay Ferries, and the Province of Nova Scotia) taking all factors into considerat­ion for the project to proceed,” read the Oct. 12 Bay Ferries media release. “Further announceme­nts will follow over the coming weeks as additional decisions are made.”

 ?? TINA COMEAU PHOTO ?? The Cat ferry in port in Yarmouth. The boat ended its 2018 season having carried 50,185 passengers.
TINA COMEAU PHOTO The Cat ferry in port in Yarmouth. The boat ended its 2018 season having carried 50,185 passengers.

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