Case of Summerside developer charged with environmental, criminal offences adjourned again
Court heard the criminal charges may be diverted to alternative measures

The case against developer Nathan Kember and his company Strategic Holdings Inc. did not go ahead as planned on Friday in Summerside provincial court.
Kember, 32, personally faces seven charges under the province's Environmental Protection Act and four criminal charges, including threatening to kill employees of the department that oversees that legislation.
The company of which Kember is the president is also facing four environmental charges.
Kember did not appear personally in court Friday. His lawyer appeared virtually and told the court his client welcomed a new baby this week, but also said they were not prepared to proceed on the matters.
Jordan Brown told the court there were still processes and details to be sorted out between himself and the Crown, partially due to scheduling conflicts, but he hoped the case could move along in the coming days.
Judge Krista MacKay told the room she was "not particularly happy" the environmental charges were not being dealt with Friday, as that was the expectation she had set at the last appearance.
Kember's environmental charges, allegedly for work done in or around a wetland without the proper permits, were first addressed at a court appearance in November.
The charges have come before the court several times since, adjourned each time so that the defence could seek a resolution with the Crown — who echoed MacKay's comments Friday about the proceedings not going ahead.
Crown Attorney Chad McQuaid also noted that his office has received a lot of correspondence around this file — perhaps more than any other file in his career.
"At this point, I believe the ball is in Mr. Brown's court," he told the judge.
MacKay adjourned the case to next month, noting that she would be taking pleas on the environmental charges that day.
"There's going to be a plea… It's going to be guilty or not guilty," she said. "In two weeks time, I'm taking a plea one way or the other. This has gone on long enough."
There was also talk on Friday that Kember's criminal charges might be diverted to alternative measures, a process outside of the judicial system.
In order to be eligible for the program on P.E.I., the accused must accept responsibility for the crime and be willing to participate in the program through probation services.
If the person completes the steps outlined in an agreement crafted under the program, the charges are stayed. If not, the matter comes back before the courts.