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Northern Peninsula 'not a rosy picture,' says population expert

It's hard to avoid the conclusion that the future is very bleak for the Northern Peninsula and some other rural areas of Newfoundland and Labrador, says an expert in population trends.

Rob Greenwood says demographics are killing rural communities; better governance needed

The small, remote fishing settlement of Cook's Harbour, on the tip of the Northern Peninsula, is facing a bleak future with a rapidly aging population, and practically nothing to offer the next generation. (Bruce Tilley/CBC)

It's hard to avoid the conclusion that the future is very bleak for the Northern Peninsula and some other rural areas of Newfoundland and Labrador,says an expert in population trends.

Rob Greenwood says demographics an aging population andplummeting fertility rates are killing some communities.

"It's not a rosy picture," saidGreenwood, executive director of Memorial University'sHarris Centre, which specializes in regional policy and development.

A 'wonderful' way of life is threatened

A recent report by the Harris Centre shines a troubling spotlight on the Northern Peninsula.

One projection forecasts the region will see apopulation plunge of more than 40 per cent over the next two decades.

We have the weakest resources at the community level to do anything.- Rob Greenwood, Harris Centre

That's not a surprise to Nita Hughes, owner of the last remaining business in tiny Green Island Cove.

She sells gasoline and convenience items, working 10 hours a day, but business is slow.

"I would close it now but my husband don't want me to close it," says Hughes.

"Sometimes I gets tired of it. You know what I works for? Two dollars an hour. I'm just hanging on just staying afloat."

Nita Hughes operates the last remaining business in the small Northern Peninsula community of Green Island Cove, selling convenience items and gasoline. (Bruce Tilley/CBC)

A bleak situation, and Greenwood says similar scenarios are playing out in regions likeSouthern Labrador, and some areas of the south and northeast coasts of Newfoundland.

"Over the next 10 to 15 years, as the boomers move into nursing homes, a lot of those communities where there is a real viable, wonderful way of life today, but largely on pensions, and long distance commuting that's going to be gone," Greenwood said.

'The research is pretty clear'

Larger communities like St. Anthony, a service centre with some 2,400 people on the tip of the Northern Peninsula, will survive in some form for generations to come.

But many isolated, remote communities won't be so lucky, he said.

Will this approach reverse the decline in many communities? Certainly not.- Eddie Joyce

"The research is pretty clear," Greenwood said.

"If you're one of the larger, urban centres, relatively speaking, in a rural arealike St. Anthony, that has good health care, good shopping, good transportation access with the airport, and a fairly diversified employment base, it's going to be there in a hundred years.

Rob Greenwood is the executive director at Memorial University's Leslie Harris Centre of Regional Policy and Development. (Bruce Tilley/CBC)

"But the populations are going to be lower, unless there is a dramatic change in immigration, and we're going to have to adapt services, in innovative ways, to meet smaller populations where it's harder to attract various professionals."

Regional governance modelstudied

So what can be done if the writing is on the wall for many of these rural places?

There's no magic solution, but for Greenwood, the key is to adapt to the decline.

And that means a shake-up in the way communities provide local governance, with a greater push towards a regionalapproach.

When Viking Trail Academy in Plum Point opened for the 2002-03 school year, there were nearly 40 graduates. This year, there are only nine students in Level III, and they expect to leave the region once they finish high school. (Terry Roberts/CBC)

"We have the weakest resources at the community level to do anything," Greenwood said of the hundreds of town councils that provide governance in small communities throughout the province.

Greenwood addedthere's a well-known saying that councils are cheap, but services are expensive.

Enhanced services needed

Most communities are within a close commute of one another, and Greenwood said an important web already connects many towns.

For example, people often work in neighbouring communities, and send their children to other communities to get an education.

The missing link, he said, is strong, regional governance similar to the county system used in Nova Scotia, and this shortcoming will become even more pronounced as communities continue to decline.

"We need to really enhance that kind of planning so that you can have more capability for service provision with fewer resources," Greenwood said.

All sides on board

Greenwoodis not a lone wolf touting some far-fetched philosophy, and there are already plenty of examples of regions working together to provide services such as fire protection, water and sewer, recreation and garbage collection.

Joint councils havesprung up in places such as Conception Bay North, with local leaders recognizing the benefits of co-operation.

This abandoned home is located in a small community on the Northern Peninsula. There are scenes like this in many of the 70 or so communities that dot this vast, troubled region. (Bruce Tilley/CBC)

Regional governance is also supported by groups such as Municipalities Newfoundland and Labrador, and the provincial government.

A new regional governance advisory committee is now at work, helping create a potential governance model to fit Newfoundland and Labrador.

And feedback during a premier's forum on local government last month proved the concept has support.

"The feedback we received highlights the desire to think regionally in order to help sustain rural communities for the future," Municipal Affairs MinisterEddie Joyce stated in a follow-up news release.

"Will this approach reverse the decline in many communities? Certainly not."

However, Greenwood said this would save money, "and also really enhance effectiveness of service delivery with fewer people."