DFO nixes plan to complete Highway 101 twinning over Avon River - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:36 AM | Calgary | -13.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

DFO nixes plan to complete Highway 101 twinning over Avon River

Public Works Minister Kim Masland is once again blaming Ottawa for delaying the completion of the twinning of Highway 101 near Windsor, N.S., but the local Liberal MP calls it a 'textbook failure of two levels of government.'

'I'm getting tired of saying it ... but we will complete this project,' N.S. public works minister says

Highway construction
A new stretch of Highway 101 near Windsor, N.S., remains unfinished, with no consensus on how to proceed. (Paul Withers/CBC)

There's no end in sight to a dispute that is delaying a new stretch of Highway 101 from being completednear Windsor, N.S.

The 9.5-kilometre twinning project shouldhave been finished a year ago, but Nova Scotia's Department of Public Works has not been able to convince the federal FisheriesDepartmentto give a portion of the project the green light.

Work is stalled over a section of highway that will span the Avon River. The province needs to install two bridges and replace the existing causeway and aboiteau, gates that can open and close to allow for water to pass through.

DFO, First Nations and environmentalists have argued that full fish passage should be restored, but the province is proposing a design that would allow limited fish passage and also maintain Lake Pisiquid, which was created by the current closure of the aboiteau.

The province first ordered the gates closed on June 1, 2023, in an emergencycabinet decree that has been renewed every two weeks since. The province has saidthe lake needs to be full to ensure firefighters have the water they need in case of an emergency.

Asked for an update Thursday on the years-long dispute,Public Works Minister Kim Maslanddid not hide her frustration.

"Let's go back and do a little storytelling exercise here on the aboiteau," said Masland, after acknowledging DFO has recently rejected the province's plans. "They have now come back to us and said that they are looking further into our [other] options, they're not happy with this."

Masland said her department had originally submitted multiple options,but was told by the federalgovernment to "pick one."

Woman in leather blazer sits near four flags
Kim Masland, Nova Scotia's minister of public works, said the province will work to complete the project. (CBC)

The one the province chose is the one DFOrecently rejected.

"We'll work with them,"said Masland after a cabinet meeting."I'm getting tired of saying it ... but we will complete this project."

Both sides of the newly twinned section of the 101 are open to traffic, but there's a detour onto the old stretch of road adjacentto the Avon River.

'Textbook failure of 2 levelsof government'

Drivers have complained about it being a dangerous detour, but Masland said the department hasinstalled "enhanced safety measures" to make it safer.

The Liberal MP for the area, Kody Blois, said he was just as frustrated as Masland over the delays, but he denied it was all the federal government's fault. He called it a "textbook failure of two levels of government."

Blois said he favoured a plan that would keep water in the lake, but also allowed for salt water to flow in and out, in order to facilitate some fish passage.

A man in a suit and tie.
Kody Blois is the MP for Kings-Hants. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

Blois urged his caucus colleague, federal Fisheries Minister Diane Lebouthillier, to use her discretion to "balance the variety of different factors" in this dispute and allow the highway to be completed.

"It has been a stalemate," said Blois. "I'm very hopeful and I will be very vocal if we are not able to get a resolution. I expect that this can be solved before Christmas."