Trent-Severn Waterway (TSW) — NPLRA, AGM July 27, 2013

 Major Issues, News, Trent-Severn Waterway  Comments Off on Trent-Severn Waterway (TSW) — NPLRA, AGM July 27, 2013
Aug 012013
 
Trent Severn Waterway

There were many issues facing the TSW last year, staff lay-offs, changes to lock operations, First Nation settlement, worries about water management and flooding, that we are struggling to address and understand. After MP Barry Devolin tabled a Private Members Bill C-530 last month asking for change in governance of the TSW I decided to look briefly into the history of the TSW for guidance.

Built in the 19th century, during Ontario’s logging boom, it was built to open up the interior of the province, to promote agriculture, lumbering and to be used for industrial and transportation purposes to create economic prosperity. Upon completion Lake Ontario had been connected with Lake Huron trough 836 km of navigational waters with about 32 Km of man-made channels, 45 locks and dams. A few years after the completion of the TSW the Welland Canal (1932) opened which could handle much larger ocean going ships and the Trent became mainly obsolete for commercial purposes.

However it had created thousands of hectares of prime waterfront properties and had enormous recreational possibilities.

Originally the TSW was the responsibility of Transport Canada.

This changed in the 1970’s when it was transferred to Parks Canada (PC). At the time this probably made sense since it was more of recreational than commercial value. The TSW became the largest national historic site under the governance of PC.

For many years now PC has been criticized for its antiquated management of the TSW. Today $23.6 bill is the estimated market value of waterfront properties and the TSW generates $1 bill in economic activity each year (2009), Ontario sport fishing industry brings in $300 mill in tax revenues. Tourism is the chief industry in our area.

Fast forward to 2005, the election of Bruce Stanton, now MP for North Simcoe. As a former resort operator Stanton lobbied successfully to put the state of the TSW back on the government radar. In 2007 the federal minister of the Environment appointed a six-member panel to review all aspects of the TSW. 2008 The report on the future of the TSW was published: “It’s all about the Water” with 26 complex recommendations.
www.tswpanel.ca

  • The panel asked for $270 mill over 10 years and some estimated that it would take $400 mill to ensure the future of the TSW.
  • Following this report the government committed $83 mill over a 5-year period (ending 2014).

Parks Canada allocated most funds to infrastructure replacement and repairs:

I.e. Bolsover Dam replacement at Lock 37 which is under way now or Hastings Swing Bridge replacement (County RD 45) as well as Bobcaygeon Lock 32 inspection and repair.

$7.5 mill were allocated to water monitoring equipment and about $29 mill to boosting the operating budget.

Last year, 2012:  Parks Canada announced $29 mill in budget cuts due to the federal governments deficit reduction action plan.

Citizens have voiced severe concern about these cuts and their economic impact.
Concerns for:
Water management affecting drinking water, fish population, navigation, archaeological discoveries,
Lock operations,
Economic impact on tourism,
Taxation
User Fees
Etc

The organization Voices for the Trent-Severn Waterway, established 2008, is clearly concerned about a “sustainable financial future” for the TSW and tries to serve as an advisory board to our politicians.

Most importantly Voices is asking for a 5/10-year vision for the TSW with the input of all stakeholders.
www.voicesforthetsw.ca

Our local MPs have held several round table meetings.  The latest was hosted by MP Barry Devolin in Fenelon Falls and was attended by local business owners, tour operators, association members and our councilors.

What I took away from it was that our Government now views the comprehensive study: “It’s all about the water” as a “sitting” document, too expensive to follow up?

Infrastructure improvements are more likely to happen after Ottawa was forced to review all its capital assets after a piece of concrete fell of a Montreal bridge – legal, human costs.

All in all I have not heard a clear vision for the TWS.

Parks Canada is looking at the TSW as a National Historic Site while many of us are looking at it as a driver for the local economy and would like more input in the political decisions.

Finally, June 11, 2013 all these consultations have prompted MP Barry Devolin to introduce a Private Member’s Bill in the House of Commons calling for the creation of an independent Trent-Severn Water Authority that would assume all responsibilities for water management and canal operations and be given an expanded mandate to foster economic activity along the waterways.

The full text of Bill C-530 is available at:
www.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/

The “Coalition for Equitable Water Flow” (CEWF) representing the interest of approx 40,000 residential property owners since 2006, has already followed up with a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and 4 pages of amendments to Bill C-530.
www.cewf.ca

Even though the political process is slow, our economic realities are changing and change needs to happen.

Our communities are taking action:

Fenelon Falls improvements to the lock facilities are a success.

Lakefield is planning to revive the waterfront through commercial leases for a Heritage Building, Residences with Commercial Outlets, Eateries.
www.pc.gc.ca

Bobcaygeon built additional dockage, which NPLRA supported by sending a letter to Bobcaygeon Chamber of Commerce.

And last years statistics show that the traffic on the TSW up from 123,959 (2011) to 129,658 boats in 2012.
www.TrentSevern.com

FOCA Newsletter Summer 2013

 News  Comments Off on FOCA Newsletter Summer 2013
Jul 312013
 

Lake Stewards Newsletter

FOCA Newsletter Summer 2013

The latest edition of the FOCA Newsletter is here! Find out about:

  • winners of the 2012/13 FOCA Achievement Award
  • updates about the Lake Partner Program and new cyanobacterial (blue-green algae) monitoring project
  • FOCA Hot Topics updates: Great Lakes, ELA, Severe Weather, Fisheries Act, Algonq

http://www.foca.on.ca/Newsletter_Summer_2013/index.html

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING & BBQ!

 News  Comments Off on ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING & BBQ!
Jul 152013
 

The Board of Directors invite you to attend the

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING & BBQ!

SATURDAY JULY 27th 9:00 am
At the Lawn Bowling Club
87 Dunn St., Bobcaygeon. ON

Please Join Us to:

    • Catch up with the events over the year
    • Meet other members and supporters
    • Renew or complete your membership for 2013/14
    • Find out about the issues we’ve been dealing with re LOCAL QUARRIES and Aggregates, Water Quality and the Trent-Severn Waterway

SPEAKER
Leora Berman, author of “The Land Between”

Then join us for a Barbecue….

Agenda and Speaker details to come.

Please plan to attend and support us with your membership for 2014.
Help us to keep up the pressure on our Council to bring Good Governance to local Aggregate issues!

The Land Between

 News  Comments Off on The Land Between
Apr 302013
 
The Land Between

“The Land Between is a mosaic of unique spaces including small connected lakes, remarkable rivers, rare alvars, fens, rocky barrens, meadow marshes, woodlands, and scattered settlements. It has a fascinating history. It is a place of natural splendour and rich cultural heritage.

The Land Between is an outdoor enthusiast’s paradise. The goal of The Land Between program is to enhance the environmental, cultural and economic health and vitality of the region.”

http://www.thelandbetween.ca

Peterborough Examiner: MPs fight time restrictions on boaters

 Major Issues, News, Trent-Severn Waterway  Comments Off on Peterborough Examiner: MPs fight time restrictions on boaters
Jan 252013
 
Trent Severn Waterway

TRENTON – A group of area Conservative MPs describe what’s happening on the Trent-Severn Waterway as insanity and plan to take their concerns directly to the federal Conservative caucus.

“Parks Canada is out of touch with reality when it comes to the fee consultation process. It’s driving away business and boaters,” said Peterborough MP Dean Del Mastro.

The MPs also say they don’t want any time restrictions on boaters being able to access locks, including the shoulder season.

READ THE ENTIRE ARTICE HERE

Peterborough Examiner

Quinte News: Positive meeting on TSW — Williams

 Major Issues, News, Trent-Severn Waterway  Comments Off on Quinte News: Positive meeting on TSW — Williams
Jan 252013
 
Trent Severn Waterway

The Mayor of Quinte West says the meeting with regional MPs and Parks Canada waas very positive.

Yesterday, John Williams met with four federal members, including Daryl Kramp and Rick Norlock, to discuss the Trent Severn Waterway and the new fees proposed for boaters.

Williams says they’ve agreed changes were needed and they’ll soon be submitting a new proposal.

READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE

Quinte News Logo

MyKawartha Article: Parks Canada encourages continued feedback on proposed Trent-Severn Waterway fee increases

 Major Issues, News, Trent-Severn Waterway  Comments Off on MyKawartha Article: Parks Canada encourages continued feedback on proposed Trent-Severn Waterway fee increases
Jan 242013
 
Trent Severn Waterway

(KAWARTHA LAKES) Parks Canada media officer Andrew Campbell has visited Fenelon Falls’ lock on the Trent-Severn Waterway (TSW), and he understands why the village and other communities on the waterway are worried about the impact of budget cuts.

“I love Fenelon Falls; and it’s a beautiful lock…the new dock with its power hookups is great,” he said.

But, he assures boaters and businesses that depend on the TSW that Parks Canada continues to welcome public input as it refines proposed increases to docking and mooring fees.

READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE

myKawartha Logo

Quarry Approved — CHEX Peterborough

 Major Issues, News, Quarries  Comments Off on Quarry Approved — CHEX Peterborough
Jan 152013
 

“Shock and outrage tonight for several residents in Galway-Cavendish and Harvey Township.

Today, council approved a bylaw for a 400-acre quarry near Nogie’s Creek.

But as Mark Giunta reports, residents vow to quash the plan.”

http://www.chextv.com/News/LN/13-01-15/Residents_Upset_over_Approved_Quarry_in_Galway-Cavendish_and_Harvey_Township.aspx

CHEX Television

[embedplusvideo height=”500″ width=”630″ standard=”http://www.youtube.com/v/crPYNWqq-Yc?fs=1″ vars=”ytid=crPYNWqq-Yc&width=630&height=500&start=&stop=&rs=w&hd=0&autoplay=0&react=1&chapters=&notes=” id=”ep5332″ /]

CHEX Peterborough

Quarry Update — CHEX Peterborough

 Major Issues, News, Quarries  Comments Off on Quarry Update — CHEX Peterborough
Jan 072013
 

“Quarry development in Galway-Cavendish Harvey Township has long been a contentious issue.

And as Greg Davis reports, a local group is concerned a nearby cave system was ignored during environmental studies for a proposed quarry site near Bobcaygeon.”

NPLRA President Ross Morton is interviewed regarding the issues by CHEX Peterborough.

http://www.chextv.com/News/LN/13-01-07/Update_on_Quarry_Development_in_Galway-Cavendish_Harvey_Township.aspx

CHEX Television

[embedplusvideo height=”500″ width=”630″ standard=”http://www.youtube.com/v/JVZYTxflJKw?fs=1″ vars=”ytid=JVZYTxflJKw&width=630&height=500&start=&stop=&rs=w&hd=0&autoplay=0&react=1&chapters=&notes=” id=”ep2317″ /]
CHEX Peterborough

Now we see Dewdney’s Caves… Soon we may not.

 Major Issues, News, Quarries  Comments Off on Now we see Dewdney’s Caves… Soon we may not.
Jan 032013
 
Dewdney's Cave

What few know is that right outside Bobcaygeon, in Galway-Cavendish Harvey Township, we have what spelunkers (cavers) have said is Ontario’s number 2 cave system and perhaps number 31 in all of Canada.

Little is known about the caves but “old timers” talk of exploring the caves, which carried names such as the Ongley Caves, the Parker Caves, and now the Dewdney Mountain Caves. Research by members of the North Pigeon Lake Ratepayers’ Association, into how well various organizations did their research for a proposed quarry adjacent to these caves, identified it as a very significant karst (a region made up of porous limestone containing deep fissures and sinkholes and characterized by underground caves and streams).

From what we have gleaned from cavers’ reports and those who have visited the site we see this cave system as extremely important, significant to geology, the environment, species at risk like bats, and as a potential tourist attraction for the area. E. A. Ongley wrote a thesis on the caves in 1965 and it is widely available to anyone researching the area. The caves should be referred to as the Dewdney’s Caves, derived from Arthur Dewdney who was Rod Parker’s (the owner prior to a Mr. Ritchie) great grandfather. There would appear from these sources to be over 1.6 kilometers (possibly 10 kms) of caves explored and many more meters unexplored. They are suspected to be about 500 metres from the proposed quarry with the cave floor in some places lying only 2 m above the water table. This needs to be verified before blasting in the quarry begins. Why does Council and other authorities resist this investigation?

Just East of Lakefield, The Warsaw Caves are a well-known and well-used tourist attraction. For decades they have been a favorite destination for many families wishing to see examples of erosion over centuries through the limestone. This makes it one of Ontario’s best tourist destinations, making the top 15 in 2012.

Helen Gerson from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources states, in the guidelines for bats of Ontario, that every OMNR district office should prepare a list of locations of caves and mines in which bats hibernate during the winter. She also states that in The Endangered Species Protection Act it mandates stiff fines and possible imprisonment for those who kill or disturb endangered bats or harm their habitat.

Although not a project of Kawartha Region Conservation Authority(KRCA), the caves referred to so far have not been identified as an Area of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI). As such, they have not been granted protection as a significant natural heritage feature (Natural Heritage policies of the PPS). Furthermore, MNR staff was contacted on this matter and indicated that the MNR has accepted the geology /hydro geology studies prepared in support of the Dewdney Farms quarry application without providing information or consideration to the endangered species protection act on this issue of caves and bats in the area.

From a report of 2003 by Trent University entitled “The Parker Property: An Important Biological Rich Hardwood Forest area in Central Ontario” we learned the following “The flora is overall very rich with a large number of regionally or provincially rare orchids, sedges and ferns. The Natural Heritage Information Group of MNR and the Canadian Nature Conservancy found 423 vascular plant species in a short one-day visit in 2002. Rare snakes and salamanders also occur, as well as a rich butterfly, dragonfly and Damsel fly fauna and a large mammal population, including a winter deer yard with 950 white-tailed deer in 1998 (MNR-Report). The bird diversity is also rich, but not yet fully documented. There are numerous underground caves in the limestone, where the Queen’s University Caving Society has explored and mapped 10 km of underground caves, one of the longest underground sequences in the province of Ontario.”

In spite of the fact that this is such a unique feature, possibly of greater significance than the protected Warsaw Caves, why did not one of the exhaustive reports on the area of the potential quarry mention such an Ontario feature?

What is needed is an ANSI study to determine whether the caves play a significant role in the area and garner the attention of the local Councils who have control over approval of Quarry applications. This is a costly effort for which we will be seeking the support from local residents. Perhaps the Council of Galway- Cavendish Harvey will pay half of the $2000 needed while the NPLRA pays the other half. With Mr. Ritchie’s cooperation we could determine once and for all the importance of the caves.

Ross Morton
President, North Pigeon Lake Ratepayers’ Association
WWW.NPLRA.CA

For those of you who want to explore before potential damage is done to the surrounding area by blasting or heavy truck traffic just drive about 3 kms east of Nogies Creek on #36 to Quarry Road and turn left. You travel about 6.8 kms from #36 always staying to the left at turns. We suggest you ask Mr. Ritchie for his permission to walk the property. 

https://maps.google.ca/maps?q=44.646613,-78.50367&num=1&t=h&z=16

Or by map coordinates for you real hikers and geocaches 44.646613,-78.50367.