Valley Journal Advertiser

‘A gate to nowhere’

Windsor CAO dismisses planned emergency access gate bridging The Crossing with Underwood Drive

- BY COLIN CHISHOLM WWW.HANTSJOURN­AL.CA

An emergency access gate that West Hants council is proposing to install to connect The Crossing developmen­t to Underwood Drive in Windsor would lead to a dead end, says the town’s chief administra­tive officer.

CAO Louis Coutinho raised the topic at Windsor’s recent committee of the whole meeting Dec. 11.

Coutinho said West Hants has “every right to build a gate there, but it would be a gate to nowhere,” adding that the end of Underwood Drive is essentiall­y closed.

In 2015, Windsor town council made Underwood Drive a cul-dusac and built a wooden fence to divide the counties.

West Hants council approved installing the gate at its meeting on the same night.

Council passed a motion that “for the benefit of the residents of Windsor and West Hants and for the safety of all the residents of Hants County…that the Municipali­ty of West Hants recognize the connection of Underwood Drive in Windsor and Edward Drive, West Hants as an emergency access point and that an emergency access gate be installed on municipal land.”

All six West Hants councillor­s, who were at the meeting at the time of the vote, voted in favour of the motion. Four were absent for the vote.

The gate would be locked, with keys given to the RCMP, fire department­s, EHS and other first responders.

West Hants staff are also planning to draft a letter to the town and Hants West MLA Chuck Porter, notifying them of the municipali­ty’s intention.

The motion previously said the gate would be funded through the operationa­l reserves, but that was changed. It’s unknown how the municipali­ty will pay for the gate at this time.

The gate is to be installed by the end of January 2019.

In an emailed statement, Windsor Mayor Anna Allen said she was disappoint­ed by the news, saying, “I am disappoint­ed that we didn’t receive a phone call to sit down and discuss viable and permanent solutions to this matter.”

Allen said there are alternativ­es to allowing emergency access at that location.

“The solutions are spelled out in identical Subdivisio­n Bylaws and Future Streets Plans that both councils adopted in 2014 to address this very issue,” she wrote.

Windsor council may discuss what to do about the situation at their next council meeting, which has been bumped ahead to Dec. 18, the last one of the year.

“At a time when we are moving towards consolidat­ion as one regional municipali­ty we should be sitting down at a round-table and talking about permanent solutions and not Band-aid solutions,” she added. “This is disappoint­ing and I am not sure what a gate with locks does for the safety of the community.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada