Sudbury

West Nipissing hopes 'exciting' development heals 'scar' left behind by paper mill

Plans to redevelop the old paper mill site in Sturgeon Falls are slowly moving ahead, but the mayor says she isn't in hurry.

There were fears Sturgeon Falls would become a ghost town when paper mill closed in 2002

A smiling woman in a fashionable top stands in front of a hydroelectric dam
West Nipissing Mayor Kathleen Thorne Rochon stands on the site of the former Sturgeon Falls paper mill, with the hydro plant now owned by the municipality in the background. (Erik White/CBC )

Walking around on the sprawling vacant lot right in the middle of her northern Ontario town, Kathleen Thorne Rochon points to where things used to be.

But the West Nipissing mayor is much more interested in what could be built on the land where the town's paper mill once stood.

"I always saw it as a bit of a scar," said Thorne Rochon, "and a reminder of the loss the community suffered when the mill closed down and the economic hardship and the worry people were going through at that time."

Black and white aerial photo showing an industrial paper mill beside a river, surrounded by homes and residential streets.
The paper mill in Sturgeon Falls, shown here in the 1950s when it was run by Abitibi, was the main employer in the town until it was closed in 2002 by the Weyerhaeuser company. (West Nipissing Historical Society )

When Weyerhaeuser decided to close the mill in 2002 and lay off hundreds of workers, there were fears Sturgeon Falls could become a ghost town.

But the opposite has happened in the years since. West Nipissing is one of the few communities in northeastern Ontario to see steady population growth, as it has emerged as a bedroom community sandwiched between Sudbury and North Bay.

After years of negotiations, the town bought the 11-hectare site from the paper company in 2020 and is now working on plans to redevelop it.

West Nipissing council received a plan last year calling for a business strip along Highway 17, a new neighbourhood with a range of different housing options, plus parkland and trails along the Sturgeon River.

An initial environmental assessment has been completed and a Phase 2 assessment, helped along by $50,000 in Fednor funding, is expected to be finished by the spring.

"What you see on paper might not be exactly what turns out in the end, but it is a vision for us to follow," said Thorne Rochon.

A big empty lot with grass, asphalt and a fence in the back
West Nipissing council is currently doing a second environmental assessment on the 11-hectare former paper mill site in Sturgeon Falls, hoping to begin construction in a few years. (Erik White/CBC )

"I think it's really important that we do get it right it, because this is a generational opportunity for development. It will change the way West Nipissing, the way Sturgeon Falls looks. It will have a huge impact." 

She says the town already has "investors and businesses in the community approaching us" about building on the property.

And while she expects the full development might not be complete for 15 years, she's hoping to see the first shovels in the ground within five years. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Erik White

journalist

Erik White is a CBC journalist based in Sudbury. He covers a wide range of stories about northern Ontario. Send story ideas to erik.white@cbc.ca