Nova Scotia

Port Hawkesbury mayor urging Cape Breton gateways strategy

The mayor of Port Hawkesbury is urging Cape Breton municipalities and First Nations to develop a joint gateways strategy so the island's seaports, airports and highways can work in concert to boost tourism.

Brenda Chisholm-Beaton says seaports, airports and highways need to work in concert to boost tourism

Port Hawkesbury Mayor Brenda Chisholm-Beaton says Cape Breton municipalities and First Nations need a strategy to enhance gateways, such as the Canso causeway, to boost tourism. (Submitted by Glen Fry/Department of Fisheries and Oceans)

The mayor of Port Hawkesbury, N.S., is urging Cape Breton municipalities and First Nations to develop a joint gateways strategy to help boost tourism.

Brenda Chisholm-Beaton said the island's seaports, airports and highways need to work in concert, and for that to happen, local governments are going to have to start talking to each other.

"I really do feel like there is an opportunity to collaborate together on one big project and do something meaningful that will move the needle, or position our island for incredible growth and prosperity," she said.

The strategy may be tricky to develop, given competing container terminal proposals in Sydney and Melford, Chisholm-Beaton said.

The mayor was also caught in a dispute earlier this year over fears that a proposed airport for Inverness County would take business away from the existing one near Port Hawkesbury.

A woman with glasses, blonde hair and a white blouse and sweater sits at a desk and smiles.
Port Hawkesbury Mayor Brenda Chisholm-Beaton says the NSFM backed CBRM's request for a separate deal with the province and she's not sure why CBRM is still unhappy. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

However, discussions on the gateways idea started before the Inverness airport project became public, she said.

"There will be some competing interests, I mean that's a given, but I think it's still important that we have the kind of conversations about what are some things that can unite us?" Chisholm-Beaton said.

"What are some things we can work on together?"

Local governments can work on projects that unite the island, she said.

For example, there is some suggestion the province will be redesigning the highway rotary in Port Hastings, on the island side of the Canso causeway, over the next few years.

That makes it an ideal time to get input from municipalities and First Nations across Cape Breton to find out whether a new visitor centre or some other facilities should greet travellers who come from off-island, Chisholm-Beaton said.

There may be ways to direct tourists to attractions around the region and keep them on the island longer, she said.

"We really need to have those discussions now and kind of start a collaborative process," Chisholm-Beaton said.

A man with grey hair in a pine wood pannelled room smiles for the camera.
Victoria County Warden Bruce Morrison says some constituents objected to the $12,000 cost of the trip, but he says it will be worth it if it pays off in millions of dollars in added development. (CBC)

Victoria County endorsed the gateways proposal earlier this week.

Warden Bruce Morrison said the idea can work.

"There's currently a great spirit of co-operation on the island with the five municipalities and the five First Nations, so I think this project could be mutually beneficial to all," he said.

Victoria County's main gateway is the community wharf on the Bras d'Or Lake in Baddeck.

Small port development

Morrison said that's not the only reason to join an islandwide strategy, but it is a good one.

"Absolutely, I think it'd fit in quite nicely, particularly with the discussions around port development," he said.

"We are a small port. We're getting small cruise ships in now."

Chisholm-Beaton said she intends to seek support from other governments around Cape Breton in the coming year.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tom Ayers

Reporter/Editor

Tom Ayers has been a reporter and editor for 38 years. He has spent the last 20 covering Cape Breton and Nova Scotia stories. You can reach him at tom.ayers@cbc.ca.