Valley Journal Advertiser

‘Competing interests’ remain as causeway solution undecided

Province hosts public open house for feedback on Highway 101 twinning project

- BY COLIN CHISHOLM WWW.HANTSJOURN­AL.CA

It’s still technicall­y in the early stages, but debate rages on regarding what should be done with the causeway/aboiteau portion of the Highway 101 twinning project.

The small portion of an otherwise major infrastruc­ture overhaul has become a painful bottleneck of issues and concerns for many in the surroundin­g area.

Layered on top of a jurisdicti­onal nightmare revolving around the federal Department of Fisheries obligation­s and provincial priorities for improving road safety and protecting communitie­s from rising sea level, local groups and citizens are divided on what should be done next.

What about fish passage? What about protecting Lake Pisiquid? What about First Nations? What about recreation? What about communitie­s up river? Down river?

It’s a stage in the process where it seems there are more questions than answers.

On Oct. 10, citizens had their say during two open house sessions at the Windsor Legion.

The provincial transporta­tion department’s unenviable task is to collect all of that feedback and somehow incorporat­e it into a plan that will satisfy at least some of the stakeholde­rs.

Justin Tanner, manager of highway planning and design for Nova Scotia’s Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal, said they are still in the public consultati­on phase of the project.

“What we’ve done with our consultant­s at CBCL is come up with a number of options,” Tanner said. “We haven’t chosen anything yet. What we’re here to do is inform the public on what (the options) are and what the impacts might be.”

They’re also collecting feedback, Tanner says, to help inform the government on their decision as they go forward.

“We’re definitely hearing concerns about the lake, they don’t want to see lake levels impacted or muddy water coming in,” Tanner said. “At the same time, we’re also hearing concerns about fish passage, and they’re kind of competing interests.”

“It’s a challenge to maintain the lake and significan­tly improve fish passage,” he said. “We’re hoping to hear more on those key issues and refine our design options as best we can to hopefully please everybody and have a balanced solution.”

Tanner said the province is also required to meet certain legal obligation­s for this project, including a mandate to improve fish passage.

“Part of that is satisfying DFO (federal depart of fisheries and oceans) that we have improved fish passage, how much that will be, we don’t know at this point,” he said. “They will not dictate how much fish passage we need to provide, we go to them with a proposal and they will either approve or reject it.”

He said they’ve also been actively consulting with various First Nations communitie­s, as recently as the day before the open house.

“They have a lot of interest in this area and they would like us to maximize fish passage as much as possible,” he said.

The department will now examine all of the feedback they’ve received from the past several weeks to determine the next steps.

More consultati­on is possible down the road, he said, although perhaps not to this extent.

Residents weigh in

Windsor resident Rick Smith said there was a lot to take in, with several maps, placards and materials shown around the room.

“I think having an informatio­n session this afternoon and again this evening gives people the opportunit­y to come out an ask questions,” Smith said. “That in itself is going to better inform them about what’s taking place and what the options are.”

Smith said that, at least from what he’s seen, the province is trying to balance the concerns of maintainin­g Lake Pisiquid and improving fish passage.

“The department has done their homework and they know how they’re going to build that highway,” he said. “In terms of the aboiteau, I think most people that are looking at this are hoping to have the lake at a reasonable level and keeping it primarily a fresh water lake.”

Save Our Lake campaign

Windsor Mayor Anna Allen said she’s not surprised that this issue has caused a wedge in the community.

“It seems to me, we’ve been through a divided community before and hopefully most people’s confidence will be in the thing that’s being done,” Allen said. “Council’s priority is definitely protecting the lake and enhancing fish passage.”

“They’re working really hard to accomplish that.”

Save Our Lake posters have popped up across storefront windows in downtown Windsor, and Allen said that shows how closely people are watching this issue.

“It’s brought a lot of awareness to this issue and if people don’t know what’s going on, they don’t say anything, so that’s a good thing.”

Petitcodia­c example

Jocelyne Marchand, a resident of Grand Pré, said she came to the meeting because she’s interested in the local ecosystem.

“I have friends who depend on the Minas Basin for their livelihood and I’ve been following this issue for a long time,” Marchand said. “I have lived here long enough to see the changes to the north side of the causeway.”

Marchand said the region could learn a lot from the Petitcodia­c River example in New Brunswick.

In that scenario, a causeway, built in the 1960s, came down completely in 2017 and was replaced by a bridge, which restored tidal flow. The river passes by the city of Moncton.

“I travel to Moncton quite frequently, and there hasn’t been any major catastroph­e, like what people are worried about here,” she said. “A tidal river has its own ways with dealing with surges.”

Marchand said she’d like the Petitcodia­c Riverkeepe­r, a nonprofit organizati­on that rallied for the freeing of that river, to bring their knowledge and experience to bear on the Avon River.

Local fisherman Darren Porter said he’s still frustrated over the process after deputy minister Paul LaFleche said they would scrap Option C without consulting First Nations.

“This is being done to accommodat­e the political will of some in the community, which circumvent­s the process,” Porter said. “This is supposed to be an evidence-based decision, not decision-based evidence manufactur­ing.”

Porter said First Nations groups and others were happy with Option C because it opened up the river to restricted tidal flow, which would allow fish to flow more freely.

“They’ve taken the pressure off themselves and are now trying to make the fisheries and First Nations look like the bad guys,” he said. “Option D removes the fight until later, until constructi­on is complete.”

Porter said he would be one of the biggest “losers” if Option C goes ahead, losing his usual fishing spot. But he’s still in favour of it.

The province will refine their designs before conducting more consultati­on, eventually picking an option.

Funding requiremen­ts haven’t been determined at this time.

 ?? PHOTO BY COLIN CHISHOLM ?? Hundreds of residents from the surroundin­g area attended two open house public informatio­n sessions regarding the Highway 101 twinning project on Oct. 10.
PHOTO BY COLIN CHISHOLM Hundreds of residents from the surroundin­g area attended two open house public informatio­n sessions regarding the Highway 101 twinning project on Oct. 10.
 ?? PHOTO BY COLIN CHISHOLM ?? Christophe­r Ross, engineer with the department of agricultur­e and Windsor resident Dave Carmichael look over some maps of the proposed project.
PHOTO BY COLIN CHISHOLM Christophe­r Ross, engineer with the department of agricultur­e and Windsor resident Dave Carmichael look over some maps of the proposed project.
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