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Andy Bateman Water quality sinks Jamer application
Written by Andy Bateman   
April 20, 2009 – Last week, New Brunswick Environment Minister Roland Hache turned down Jamer Materials’ proposed Bayside Aggregate Facility at St Andrews. As is so often the case with aggregate applications, perceptions of the project’s potential impact on area water supplies were critical to the decision.

In an open letter of February 27th 2009, Jamer stated that potable water supplies, specifically those of the Chamcook Lake Watershed, would be protected with the proposed activities specifically designated under a Watershed Protection Designation Order.    

 

Hache thought otherwise, noting that the quarry's expansion was denied because it would have endangered Chamcook Lake, which is the watershed that supplies the entire town of St. Andrews. "Our decision is based on facts. And the fact is the expansion of the quarry would cause potential damage to the environment, to the lake. So we didn't take any chance at all."

 

St. Andrews Mayor John Craig also opposed the project on the grounds that the existing Port of Bayside operation “dominated the area making it too dirty and dusty for anyone else to move in. It's about time that they did leave so the area can flourish and have year-round employment for the people of Charlotte County," said Craig.

 

For Conservative MP Greg Thompson, the decision to block an expansion of the quarry was inevitable. "The proponents of the project and even the government … knew that announcing a full-blown quarry operation on the banks of an international river just wasn't going to fly with the people."