Fix for turnaround on Bill Joy's Lane postponed to next year

After a disagreement last month on how best to proceed with the realignment of the turnaround on Bill Joy’s Lane due to budgetary considerations, Bay Bulls council has decided to postpone the work until next year.

During last week’s public meeting, councillor Jason Sullivan made a motion to postpone the project and re-issue a new request for proposals in March 2023. The motion was seconded by councillor Shannon O’Driscoll, and council voted unanimously in favour of it.

The moves follows some indecision that arose when council addressed the matter back in September. At its September 12 meeting, council could not reach a consensus on the matter when Deputy Mayor Jason O’Brien made a motion to award the contract for the work, but Mayor Keith O’Driscoll said he was concerned the Town might not have the funds to complete it.

O’Brien and councillor Corey Ronayne voted in favour of moving ahead with the project, while councillor Shannon O’Driscoll and Mayor O’Driscoll voted against it. Councillor Jason Sullivan was not in attendance. Shannon O’Driscoll then made a motion to withdraw the request and reissue the tender next year. No one seconded that motion, so it died on the floor.

The new motion, which amounted to the same thing as the one councillor O’Driscoll made in September, passed with no discussion this time around.

Posted on November 2, 2022 .

Bay Bulls seeks exemption from government per capita tax policy

By Mark Squibb/October 28, 2022

The Town of Bay Bulls has once again requested an exemption from the provincial government’s Own Source Revenue tax policy.

“The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador defines ‘Own Source Revenue,’ as a general revenue from taxes,” explained Mayor Keith O’Driscoll during last week’s meeting. “Municipalities are required to maintain a minimum level of own source revenue each budget year based on population and per capita rate.”

When the policy was first implemented several years ago, it required both Bay Bulls and Witless to increase the level of taxes they were charging their residents. Both towns requested exemptions from the policy.

Bay Bulls requested an exemption last November, with councillor Jason Sullivan labelling the policy ‘outlandish’ and ‘crazy.’

This time the Town is the Minister of Municipal of Municipal Affairs for permission to reduce the per capita rate it had to charge from $1,047 down to $873. Sullivan made the motion which was seconded by new councillor Corey Ronayne.

“I would like to weigh in, because we have talked about this before, that Bay Bulls’ per capita rate is significantly higher than a lot of other municipalities of similar size and growth history,” said chief administrative officer Jennifer Aspell. “And what that means is that we have to generate more taxes than any other comparable municipalities, and therefore our mil rates are reflective of that.”

Deputy Mayor Jason O’Brien added that council’s aim is to maintain current rates and to avoid any increases.

The previous council in neighboring Witless Bay requested an exemption from the policy in 2020 on similar grounds and received approval.

In a follow up phone call, Aspell said that due to a population increase of 66 residents, the policy means that Bay Bulls will have to generate roughly $69,000 in additional tax revenue in 2023.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted on November 2, 2022 .

Witless Bay dismisses former town manager

By Mark Squibb/October 28, 2022

The revolving staff door at Witless Bay keeps on spinning.

Council voted — though not unanimously — to officially terminate its contract with former Town Manger Sean Kavanagh during last week’s public meeting.

Councillor Ralph Carey put forward a motion that Kavanagh be dismissed, without cause, as of June 9, with pay in lieu of notice.

Carey explained that as per the Municipalities Act, the matter had to be put to a vote first in a privileged meeting, before being voted on again in a public meeting.

Carey did not signify how many weeks pay Kavanagh would be provided.

Councillor Nancy Burke alone was opposed to the motion.

“I just want to say that I wasn’t here when all of these things went down,” said Burke, who had recently returned from a lengthy leave of absence. “I was still on my leave of absence. And I feel, because there weren’t things in writing for me to review, that I’ve just seen one side of things. So, for that reason, I’ll be voting against the motion, and I just wanted to make that known. I don’t want to make an uninformed vote.”

Apart from Burke, the other four council members present – Mayor Trevor Croft, Deputy Mayor Lorna Yard, councillor Carey, and councillor Gerard Dunne – voted in favour of the motion. Councillors Alex Troake and Jacob Hayden were not present at the meeting.

The motion passed without any further discussion.

The Town hired Kavanagh in February 2021, after Kevin Kelley, whom the town had hired in September, resigned in October.

At the time of Kavanaugh’s hiring, Yard boasted that council had saved taxpayers thousands of dollars by overseeing the hiring process themselves, rather than paying a consultant to do so, as is the typical protocol.

Upon hearing rumors of Kavanagh’s dismissal back in June, the Irish Loop Post reached out to the town hall, Mayor Croft, Deputy Mayor Yard, and Kavanagh himself.

Yard declined comment, saying the mayor was the official town spokesperson. Croft said Kavanagh was on a leave of absence. Kavanagh himself confirmed that he was technically on a leave of absence, but that he wasn’t at liberty to discuss it at that moment.

Mayor Croft said Monday he is unable to comment regarding the issue as of now. He added that he will gladly comment when able to.

The Irish Loop Post phoned the Witless Bay Town Hall during business hours on Monday, Tuesday, and again on Wednesday, and each call went to voice mail. Three voice messages were left asking town staff to return the call, but by deadline on Thursday, staff had not returned the calls.

Kavanagh too could not be reached.

During the February meeting in which council approved Kavanagh’s hiring, council also approved the hiring of fire chief Jack Gatherall. He was hired to replace former fire chief Maria Churchill, who was hired by the Town in May and then tendered her resignation in October.

Prior to that, longstanding assistant town clerk Barb Harrigan resigned in the summer of 2021, but then returned to the office for a brief stint before retiring in March.

Former Town Clerk Geraldine Caul, who herself had been on leave since well before the 2021 election, was called in to act as acting Town Manager during Kavanagh’s absence.

Posted on November 2, 2022 .

Witless Bay Heritage Committee wins Award of Merit

The Witless Bay Heritage Committee has won another provincial award for its work.

This past June, the committee captured the Manning Award for its book, Bygone Days of Witless Bay. The latest accolade is for all its work in the town since the committee formed in 2004.

The Museum Association of NL said it accorded the Heritage Committee its Award of Merit for the significant contributions it has made to the practice of museum and heritage work in Newfoundland and Labrador. The Award of Merit was presented to co-chairs Maureen Walsh and Bonnie Johnstone at MANL’s Annual General Meeting on October 15.

Among the committee’s work noted by MANL was the publication of Bygone Days of Witless Bay;  an inventory of houses built before 1930 that was compiled in 2011 by member Barry Norris and used as the basis for a celebration of the architecture of the community, which included providing plaques for the Historic Homes Project; the designation of the old cemetery as a registered municipal heritage site and one of Canada’s historic places; the collection and scanning of old photographs to ensure the preservation of the images; the hosting of events such as the ringing of the bells to celebrate the Armistice in 1918; collaboration with graduate Folklore students from MUN during field schools in the community; the organization of a heritage walk; provision of storyboards; visits to Alderwood Retirement Centre to display artifacts; design of an information brochure and bookmark for tourists; organization of the annual Remembrance Day ceremony at the cemetery; the hosting of a Heritage Day for Come Home Year; participation in the annual Puffin Festival; the participation of members in Heritage NL workshops; teaching Girl Guides how to perform traditional dances; the sale of old photographs of postcards and note cards; and the hosting of a contest to identify older artifacts which was enjoyed by young and old alike.

The Award of Merit is based on outstanding, innovative, or creative achievement in the museum, gallery, or heritage field, or in any area related to the preservation and development of the province’s cultural heritage, including research, collection, documentation, exhibition, public programming, and management.

“We are pleased to have this award to acknowledge all the work that has been undertaken by current and past members, some of whom have passed,” said Johnstone.

“While we have accomplished a lot, there is much left to do,” added Walsh. “We are planning our projects for the coming year, so stay tuned.”

Anyone interested in purchasing a copy of Bygone Days of Witless Bay, can contact Walsh at 689-5087 or Lucy Carew at 725-9533.

Posted on November 2, 2022 .

Mobile Central High athletes top of the charts

Mobile Central High Athletic Director Andrew Mackey (left) and assistant Ryan Parsons, the pair that works with a network of volunteers, including teachers, parents, and past students, to make Southern Shore sports teams among the most competitive and sportsmanlike in the province. Mark Squibb photo

Posted on November 2, 2022 .

Irishtown Road upgrades ratified

By Mark Squibb/October 21, 2022

Bay Bulls council rubber stamped two motions related to ongoing Irishtown Road storm sewer upgrades that had previously been approved through e-mail polls.

The first was a motion to ratify an e-mail vote of September 28 to accept material testing for the Irishtown Road Upgrade Project quote with North Consulting Ltd., at a price of $11,437, HST included.

Council also moved to ratify the e-mail vote of October 4 approving two changes orders for the project.

Those change orders were not explained, but the total price given by Deputy Mayor Jason O’Brien was $12,247, HST included.

Councillor Jason Sullivan declared a conflict of interest and refrained from voting on both motions as his family owns a business along the road.

Both motions passed unanimously.

Posted on October 26, 2022 .

Two men arrested after spree of break-and-enters

By Mark Squibb/October 14, 2022

Police have arrested two young men they believe responsible for a number of early morning break-and-enters in both Witless Bay and Bay Bulls.

Jason Anthony,23, and Scott Conway, 21, were arrested on October 1. Police are investigating five separate crime scenes and allege the pair broke into the residential properties and stole various items—including three vehicles.

Anthony is charged with break and enter, mischief under $5000 (property damage), theft of a motor vehicle, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle, prohibited operation of a motor vehicle, possession of property obtained by crime, resisting arrest, breach of probation
Conway is charged with break and enter, mischief under $5000 (property damage), theft of a motor vehicle, possession of property obtained by crime, possession of break in instruments and breach of probation

Both men were remanded into custody over the weekend. The investigation is continuing, and police ask anyone with information about these crimes to contact Ferryland RCMP at 709-432-2440.

 

Posted on October 19, 2022 .

Holyrood Pond RV park gets conditional green light from Environment

The provincial environment department has released a proposal to develop the long dormant Holyrood Pond Provincial Park into an RV ground and day park from further environmental assessment.

But the developers, Frank Tobin and Rennie Tobin, must uphold all commitments made in their environmental assessment submission, said the Minister Bernard Davis.

 Some of those commitments include that near waterbodies, slopes with a grade of less than 30 per cent  must have a minimum 30 metre naturally vegetated buffer zone and that no activities involving grubbing, ground or soil disturbance, or timber harvesting will take place in those zones.

For slopes greater than 30 percent, the buffer zones have to be larger with similar prohibitions against the land use activities outlined above.

No vegetation clearing is to occur within 800 metres of a bald eagle or osprey nest during the nesting season of March 15 to July 31, according to the department, nor within 200 metres during the rest of the year. The 200-metre buffer also applies to all other raptor nests including those of the Northern Goshawk, Sharp-shinned Hawk, Merlin, American Kestrel, Great-horned Owl, Boreal Owl, and Northern Saw-whet Owl. The location of any raptor nest sites must be reported to the Wildlife Division.

The proponents are also required to update the Province’s Environmental Assessment Division on the status of the project, and provide copies of all permits, licences, certificates, approvals and other authorizations within one year from the date of the final approval of the venture, and to provide additional updates, if requested. 

Posted on October 19, 2022 .

These St. Mary’s Bay students are quick on their feet. The group of Dunne Academy Grade 4 students participated in the Newfoundland and Labrador Athletics Association (NLAA) Cross Country Series in Bowering Park on October 1. Coach Karen Hearn and students had a great day of races, with Kellan Robin placing first in the Grade 4 Boy’s race. In the back row, from left to right, are Cohen St. Croix and Kellan Tobin. In the front row, from left, are Katie Toope, and triplets Skye Corcoran, Connor Corcoran and Dalton Corcoran.

Posted on October 19, 2022 .