Cleanup bills mounting for municipalities hit hard by post-tropical storm Fiona | 24CA News

Canada
Published 03.01.2023
Cleanup bills mounting for municipalities hit hard by post-tropical storm Fiona | 24CA News

Staff at Victoria Park in Truro, N.S., would usually be laid off presently of yr. But they’re busy cleansing up the harm brought on by post-tropical storm Fiona greater than three months in the past.

The highly effective winds toppled towering hemlocks, inflicting intensive harm to the park’s 1,200 hectares of woods and strolling trails close to the centre of city. Many sections stay off limits as a non-public contractor cuts down and hauls off the downed and broken timber.

Mayor Bill Mills stated progress was typically gradual due to the steep terrain, however three months of regular work is bearing fruit.

“I would say that we’re a little bit over half, maybe two-thirds [done],” stated Mills. “That might be a stretch, but we’ve made some great progress.”

Truro Mayor Bill Mills says what’s being salvaged from the park is being despatched to mills to be became constructing materials. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

What may be salvaged is being despatched to mills to be became constructing materials, in response to the mayor. 

“We’ve had about 20 tandem truckloads of hemlocks taken out of the park and that wood is for sale,” stated Mills, including that a number of the remaining wooden might be used to construct rails, park benches or picnic tables.

While the city was recovering a few of its remediation prices, he stated finally rely, the estimated price ticket was already $230,000 and counting.

“I think it would be fair to say it’s going to be probably well over half a million dollars,” stated Mills. “That’s speculation right now. But based on the damage that’s up there, it might even go higher.”

Wooden stairs are seen trailing down the side of a hill. Trees and debris are seen at the bottom of the stairs, on the railing.
Jacob’s Ladder, a preferred spot in Victoria Park, was broken by fallen timber throughout Fiona. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

Around 60 kilometres northeast, the Municipality of Pictou County has already spent about $600,000 clearing the harm brought on by Fiona. Warden Robert Parker estimated the invoice would seemingly develop to $750,000 or extra.

“[A] big part of our recreation in rural Pictou County is our trail system and it was terribly badly damaged,” stated Parker. “And so there’s going to be requests coming from those trails associations, you know, for hundreds of thousands of dollars probably, too.”

“So it doesn’t end, you know, even at [$750,000] or a million, it doesn’t end there.”

Parker stated he and others within the area are additionally anxious about harm to personal woodlots within the municipality.

“Acres and acres” of woodland has been flattened, stated Parker.

“It will be generations … before those will come back,”  he stated. “There’s a tremendous amount of devastation that will never get cleaned up.”

An orange barricade is seen blocking access to road leading into a park. A white sign on the barricade reads 'Park Closed.' Cut logs are seen behind the barricade, beside the road.
Cut logs are seen on the entrance of Saltsprings Provincial Park in Pictou County. (Submitted by Robert Parker)

Parker is worried all of the useless wooden may be gas for a forest hearth within the coming years.

Truro and Pictou County are each desirous to obtain the help promised by the federal authorities in Fiona’s aftermath.

“We’re going to be applying for as much as we can possibly get,” stated Parker.

A downed tree is seen crossing a trail in Victoria Park in Truro.
Some trails in Victoria Park are nonetheless blocked by fallen timber and particles. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

Mills is hoping the cash flows quicker than it did in 2003 when one other fall hurricane minimize a swath of destruction throughout the province.

“I know that for expenses incurred from Hurricane Juan, five, six years is the timeline for when we get that money back to support our budgets and support expenses,” stated Mills. 

“Our budget is close to $26 million a year now, and so you take a half-a-million-dollars expense like that — that might require a couple of streets not being rebuilt in the upcoming construction season.”

The identical goes for initiatives in Pictou County.

“Those costs will keep on coming, and so it probably will mean that some other projects will have to be put off for a year or two,” stated Parker.