Valley Journal Advertiser

Aboiteau emergency order renewed

- FRANCIS CAMPBELL fcampbell@saltwire.com @frankscrib­bler

The state of emergency first declared last June to maximize the water supply at Lake Pisiquid near Windsor continues to be renewed by the Nova Scotia government.

Cabinet, on the recommenda­tion of Municipal Affairs Minister John Lohr, renewed the state of emergency under the Emergency Act on Dec. 28, which was to remain in effect until 8 p.m. on Jan. 11.

“Having an available supply of water important for fire suppressio­n is a cause for concern from a public safety perspectiv­e,” Heather Fairbairn, spokeswoma­n for the provincial Emergency Management Office, said in an emailed response.

“As we have said in the past, there are two dry hydrants that feed from Lake Pisiquid that are unusable when the lake is dry; and while area fire department­s can use municipal water sources for some fire suppressio­n efforts, these resources may be inadequate for large-scale or multiple fires. As such, the order will be renewed as long as it is needed for public safety.”

The order, first directed on June 1, effectivel­y mandates closing the Avon River aboiteau gate at the Windsor causeway. The precaution­ary aboiteau closing fills and maintains the man-made

Lake Pisiquid.

Premier Tim Houston said in July that even though the risk of forest fires might have subsided, it didn't make sense to drain and fill the lake every time the risk changes.

“The lake will remain full because that's in the interest of public safety,” he said at the time.

JUDICIAL REVIEW

Everyone did not agree.

Calls for a reversal of that provincial emergency order ensued last summer, including an applicatio­n for a judicial review of Lohr's decision by commercial fisherman Darren Porter.

That applicatio­n, which included a motion to stay Lohr's order, made its way to the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia.

Jamie Simpson, a lawyer representi­ng Porter, said in January that the judicial review challenged the minister's decision to issue the order and it was accompanie­d by a request for a stay of the decision, an interim injunction until the review was heard.

“We were unsuccessf­ul in the request for the stay, and in the decision about the stay, Justice Scott Norton ruled that the underlying issue was not something that the court really is able to rule on, which was shocking,” Simpson said.

“We felt that Justice Norton went too far in ruling that the underlying issue was not judiciable.”

Simpson said that ruling would have made it difficult to go ahead with a judicial review.

“We appealed that portion of the stay decision to the Court of Appeal and that hearing is going ahead on March 14,” Simpson said.

“The impact of all this has been a significan­t delay to the underlying judicial review.”

Porter, whose primary fishing zone is the Avon River estuary near Windsor, in the summer paused his fishing activities to carry out monitoring studies as part of the developmen­t of and applicatio­n process for a new gated structure design and completion of the Highway 101 twinning project across the Avon River, the notice for the judicial review reads.

GASPEREAU SPAWNING

Porter, who intended to resume commercial fishing when he completed his monitoring work, said the flow of water through the

causeway aboiteau (gates) at the – down river during outgoing tides and up river for a minimum of 10 minutes of saltwater entry during incoming tides – is essential for the fishery he pursues.

Gaspereau trying to move upstream of the Avon River causeway to spawn in the summer were stopped by the closed gates and witnesses had said dozens, and more likely hundreds, of gaspereau had perished in their aborted attempt to get upstream.

The arguments for fish passage versus maintainin­g a healthy water level in the

causeway-created Lake Pisiquid have been bandied back and forth since the causeway was constructe­d more than 50 years ago.

Department In 2021, the federal of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) issued a ministeria­l order to regulate gate operations to improve fish habitat and passage.

But the federal department conceded authority to Lohr's directive on June 1 while wildfires were burning out of control in several areas of Nova Scotia.

REQUEST, NO REQUEST

Lohr told media after making the June 1 emergency declaratio­n that the fires presented a fast-moving situation and that his department had received a request that day from the Windsor fire chief related to supplying a source of water for dry hydrants.

Jamie Juteau confirmed in

judicial an affidavit related to the review applicatio­n that he made no such request.

“With respect to the State of Emergency declared on June 1, 2023, by Minister

John Lohr and the accompanyi­ng ministeria­l directive, I did not make any request to Minister Lohr or his department or anyone else for water resources in Lake Pisiquid or to ‘reinstate' Lake Pisiquid,” Juteau testified.

The issue generated a backand-forth between Houston and Abraham Zebian, elected the first mayor of the amalgamate­d municipali­ty that saw the Municipali­ty of the District of West Hants merge with the Town of Windsor on April 1, 2020.

“Certainly their mayor has had a lot to say on this,” Houston said in the summer. “Where was the mayor two years ago? I think the mayor should be aware of that fire that happened in 2016. Certainly, I was made aware of it, and the impact and the necessity for the supply of water that that lake provides. I won't look away from that. There might be others out there willing to look away from it.”

Zebian said at the time that it was disappoint­ing that the premier had chosen to deflect his responsibi­lity onto others.

“I'm really disappoint­ed that it's taken Mr. Houston two years to finally pay attention to my community's struggles in regards to the Avon River and the Highway 101 twinning project,” Zebian said.

“It's been well articulate­d by both our council and our residents.”

Zebian said he couldn't speak to the provincial government's motivation­s and why they had chosen to take action only this past summer rather than listening to the concerns of the community from two years back.

Reached Jan. 4, Zebian replied by email that his council respects “the roles and responsibi­lities that Minister Lohr holds and that if he feels, with the informatio­n that he possesses, that the emergency order is needed, then we trust the decision of the minister.”

As of this paper's press deadline, it was unknown if the emergency order was renewed.

 ?? CAROLE MORRIS-UNDERHILL • FILE ?? Windsor’s waterfront and Lake Pisiquid, the man-made body of water created in the 1970s with the constructi­on of the Avon River Causeway, remain a point of concern. Water returned to Lake Pisiquid in June 2023 when the Nova Scotia government declared a state of emergency under the Emergency Act due to several raging wildfires elsewhere in the province.
CAROLE MORRIS-UNDERHILL • FILE Windsor’s waterfront and Lake Pisiquid, the man-made body of water created in the 1970s with the constructi­on of the Avon River Causeway, remain a point of concern. Water returned to Lake Pisiquid in June 2023 when the Nova Scotia government declared a state of emergency under the Emergency Act due to several raging wildfires elsewhere in the province.

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