Witless Bay adopts bevy of new policies

By Mark Squibb

Witless Bay council approved a new donation policy last week, as well as a new records retention and disposal policy, and a new video surveillance policy, as well as a new subdivision development agreement “template.”

The subdivision agreement template was the only item to net any discussion amongst the councillors, with councillor Ralph Carey noting the Town didn’t have one and that such a plan was in its best interest.

Town CAO Jennifer Aspell said the agreement will guide all future subdivision developments.

In other council news, Mills & Wright Landscape Architecture has been contracted to prepare a design and budget estimate for the Lower Pond Lookout at a cost of $5,785 plus HST.

Council had previously submitted a gas tax funding application to pay for that project, amongst others.

Posted on January 26, 2024 .

Petty Harbour council borrowing to cover short term cash crunch

By Mark Squibb

Petty Harbour-Maddox Cove council passed a motion earlier this month to apply for a loan to cover a temporary cash flow shortfall in the amount of $156,000.

A town spokesperson said the shortfall was not from the overall budget, but that the Town is waiting on a large 2023 GST/HST rebate and is also trying to cover operating expenses for the first two months of 2024 before the bulk of property tax payments are received.

Posted on January 26, 2024 .

Council gives artist’s studio the thumbs up

By Mark Squibb

Witless Bay council Tuesday gave a resident the ‘okay go’ to construct a new artist’s studio on Bears Cove Road, but the resident will still have to apply for a business permit before opening the studio.

Council first approved a variance of a 10 percent increase to the maximum floor area for an accessory building.

Council had published a discretionary use notice and received no public comment on the matter.

Council next approved the application to construct an accessory building at the property, located at 18 Bears Cove Road.

The motion, moved by councillor Ralph Carey, stipulated the property owner will be notified that they must submit an application to operate a business to the Town before the structure can be used as an artist’s studio.

Both motions passed unanimously.

Posted on January 26, 2024 .

Colourful Ferryland businessman built thriving wholesale network on Southern Shore

By Mark Squibb

If you grew up in Ferryland, it’s likely you had dealings with Bernard Kavanagh at one time or another.

The prominent Ferryland businessman and family man passed away on January 4 at the age of 87.

Kavanagh, born to parents Elizabeth and Alphonsus in 1936, was born and raised in Ferryland. He left home at the age of 17 to work abroad, and tried his hand at everything from hunting seals in the North Atlantic to peeling potatoes at a military base in Greenland. While abroad, he survived the Great Flood of 1953, which killed some 1,830 people in Holland and hundreds more in Great Britan. Upon his return home to Ferryland, he purchased his first delivery truck and met his soon-to be wife Clara Hanlon, whom he met at a restaurant in St. John’s. Bernard and Clara, who died in 2005, were married in 1958, and that same year started a business selling potatoes out of their home.

“Dad delivered the potatoes, and mom took care of the book work,” said daughter Carol Ann O’Neill, this week.

That business would grow into a wholesale delivery business, and in 1969 Kavanagh purchased the Southern Shore Trading Company, which he turned into a general store as well as a wholesale distribution centre. Shortly after, he bought the Irish Loop Drive Restaurant.

Kavanagh, now armed with a fleet of seven trucks, shipped Coca Cola, Blue Star, Jockey Club, and Labatt’s beers, Vachon Cakes, and more, all along the Southern Shore. At one point, he was running the wholesale business, a snack bar, gas station, and general store in Renews.

Even into his 80’s, Kavanagh never slowed down. He was actively involved in the daily operations of Bernard Kavanagh's Million Dollar View Restaurant in Ferryland, where he could be found most days.

He also had things outside of the restaurant that kept him busy.

“He was 87 years old this July past, and I got a call from him early November, and he asked me if I knew anybody I could call to get funding to put bathrooms all along the shore for the hikers,” said O'Neill.

O’Neill, who is the current chairperson of the Irish Loop Artisans Co-operative, said that the matter of how to draw more tourists to the Southern Shore had been raised at a recent tourism initiative round table. When she mentioned it to her father, he came up with the bathroom idea a few days later.

“I’ve always been proud of my dad,” said O’Neill. “He’s always had a good work ethic, and he always taught us that no matter what you get, you pay for. Even as little girls going to the store, we did not walk into the store and pick up bubble-gum, we had to pay for it. And he did the same at his own restaurant. If he ate at his restaurant, he went up to the cash and paid for it.”

O’Neill, the eldest of seven daughters, says she can remember peeling potatoes in her father’s restaurant as a 12-year-old girl. She maintains that her father always held his employees, many of whom worked for him for decades, in high esteem.

“He always said that he was successful because of the workers who he had with him,” said O’Neill. “And he never expected anything out of them that he didn’t do himself.”

And while Kavanagh was known as a consummate businessmen, O’Neill said he also knew how to play.

“In the summertime, we would take off and go to Nova Scotia or Terra Nova Park, and he didn’t work then, he knew how to have fun,” said O’Neill. “Every single Sunday growing up we went to Cape Broyle for an ice cream.”

A staunch Liberal, photos of Kavanagh meeting-and-greeting Liberal politicians adorn the walls of his restaurant.

O’Neill can recall the day she got a ride home from school in a limousine with her father and Premier Joey Smallwood.

“Smallwood told me if I got a good education, I would go far,” recalls O’Neill. "I remember him saying that.”

Kavanagh would later appear in Smallwood’s book, ‘Newfoundland in Colour.’

Ferryland Mayor Aidan Costello says Kavanagh was a gentleman who did what he could for the community while also providing many much-needed jobs.

“Bernard was a great community man. He sponsored softball teams, he sponsored hockey teams, he donated to causes and benefits throughout the community,” said Costello. “If you told someone you were from Ferryland, they would ask if you knew Bernard Kavanagh. So, he was well recognized not only on the Southern Shore, but throughout the province.”

Costello recalls that on Saturday mornings, Bernard would go throughout the community and gather up teenage boys to put to work for the day. The boys might find themselves picking potatoes or weighing apricots or loading a truck with groceries for delivery on Monday morning.

“At the end of the day, he would give us a Coke and a bun and perhaps a feed at the snack bar,” said Costello. “Fifty years ago, that was well-appreciated.”

Maxine Dunne worked for Kavanagh at his snack bar from 1983 to 1985.

The job interview was an unconventional one.

“Bernard pulled up in the Winnebago, and stuck his head out the window and said, ‘Maxine, do you want a job? And without thinking I said, ‘Sure,’” said Dunne. “I said, ‘Where do you want me to work and when do you want, me to start?’ And he said, ‘I need someone at the snack bar and I need you to start Friday night.’”

Dunne would work for Kavanagh until 1985, when she was offered a position at the Historic Ferryland Museum, a posting she holds to this day.

“He was good to work for,” said Dunne. “He was fair. He was a great person in the community. He helped a lot of people. He was kind to a lot of people.”

Besides working for Kavanagh, Dunne was a close friend of O’Neill’s, and knew Kavanagh as her friend’s father before she knew him as a boss.

“The first skidoo we ever saw as children, Bernard Kavanagh had it,” said Dunne. “Where the Shamrock Festival is held across from the Folk Arts building in Ferryland, down where the Colony of Avalon is, that field where the festival is held used to be called Flake Pond, and we would all go skating on Flake Pond when it would freeze in the winter… and Bernard arrived one evening with the skidoo and a big slide in tow, a big plastic dish, and the kids were absolutely delighted. We all got on the slide, and he towed us around and gave us rides on the skidoo. He was that kind of a fellow.”

Years later, Maxine and her husband would open a bed-and-breakfast, and would often promote other restaurants in the area, including Bernard Kavanagh’s Million Dollar View Restaurant. She said guests always enjoyed meeting Bernard, and Bernard always enjoyed meeting guests.

“One time he shows up in the driveway out here, because he had met a few people the evening before, and he showed up here with a bag full of hand knit dish cloths for the two couples, and a couple for me, that his partner Harriet had knit,” said Dunne. “He was that kind of a person.”

Kavanagh was awarded an Outstanding Lifetime Achievement Award from the Irish Loop Chamber of Commerce in 2015 in recognition of his business achievements, and while most will remember him as a businessman, O’Neill, along with her sisters and a whole host of grand-children and great-grand children, remember him first and foremost as a father and a grand father.

“He was a dad before he was anything,” said O’Neill. “At the funeral Mass Kelsey Arsenault sang ‘My Daughter’s Father.’ And that song said everything. He was the best… In the past few years, I’ve heard so many stories of things that he’s done that I’ve never known about. People have come to me and told me how kind he was and what he did for them. So those stories are nice to hear, and I’d love to hear many more.”

Bernard Kavanagh back in the early 1970s when he was busy building a thriving wholesale distribution business based in Ferryland. The colourful entrepreneur died this month at age 87.


Posted on January 19, 2024 .

Council okays repairs to mayor’s property

By Mark Squibb

Witless Bay council this week cast a vote to obtain quotes for repairs to a property on Lar Norris Road, and Mayor Trevor Croft declared a conflict of interest as the home in question was his.

Deputy Mayor Lorna Yard instructed Croft, who attended the meeting by telephone, to put the phone on speaker and step away from it so as to not participate in the discussion.

Councillor Ralph Carey moved that staff obtain additional quotes to repair damage at the property.

Councillor Gerard Dunne seconded the motion, which was approved unanimously without further discussion.

Later in the meeting, council unanimously approved repairs at a Southside Track residence at a cost of $8,850 plus HST. As per the motion, the property owner was required to sign a waiver and release for any repairs on the property.

Councillor Ralph Carey said the damage had been caused by flooding.

The Irish Loop Post followed up with Town staff regarding the motions.

Staff explained that when the Town receives a complaint of property damage, staff investigate and may engage professional consultants to look into it further.

Staff say that in both of the above incidents, the claims are for water damage to property as a result of road infrastructure upgrade projects, which were completed a number of years ago.

They added that should the Town determine that the road upgrades resulted in the property damage, it will work with the property owners to identify the full extent of the liability and complete the repairs accordingly.

In both of the above cases, staff say a quote for repairs was submitted by the property owner. The Town, however, is required to obtain its own quotes.

Neither Croft nor Yard responded to a request for an interview.

Posted on January 19, 2024 .

Windchill to blame for Bay Bulls and Renews-Cappahayden dump closures

By Mark Squibb

The Eastern Regional Service Board (ERSB) announced last week that both the Bay Bulls and Renews-Cappahayden dumps would be closed until further notice.

Typically, the two dump sites are open to the public on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturdays from 8:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and again from 12:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

The ESRB announced on Tuesday, January 2, that the Bay Bulls facility would be closed that day.

The next day, the board announced that both sites would be closed until further notice.

ERSB spokesperson Will Hillard explained that provincial health and safety regulations prevent staff from working at any waste recovery facility without a warming center when the windchill is lower than minus 7°C.

“The flux in windchill this winter has made it difficult to keep Bay Bulls and Renews-Cappahayden facilities operating normal business hours,” said Hilliard. “ERSB is working with government authorities to arrange for electricity to be installed at these sites and they will reopen when weather conditions permit or when electricity has been installed.”

The board recommends that because of the closures, residents bring their household bulk waste to the Robin Hood Bay facility in St. John’s. That dump is open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday.

Posted on January 17, 2024 .

Witless Bay promotes first ever female fire captain

Chrystal Kelly was recently named the Witless Bay Volunteer Fire Department’s first female Captain in the department's 34 year history. The department consists of 31 members, including one career Fire Chief, Jack Gatherall, and 30 volunteers. Witless Bay Volunteer Fire Department Photo

Posted on January 17, 2024 .

Witless Bay restructuring town administration

By Mark Squibb

It’s a new year and a new way of doing things in Witless Bay.

The Town this week announced that current CAO Jennifer Aspell, who has been covering the role of Acting Town Clerk since July 2023, will assume the duties of the Town Clerk on a permanent basis, eliminating the need for a separate unionized position.

The Town is also looking to fill the vacated Finance and Administrative Position as well as a seasonal maintenance position.

When asked, Aspell said the positions were vacated last year.

The Town also this week announced the creation of a planning and development officer and a part-time recreation coordinator. The Town specified that the recreation coordinator position was created using funds that had previously been allocated to the Bay Bulls to Bauline Athletic Association (BBBAA).

For several years, the Town had contributed $37,000 annually to the organization, as per a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between Witless Bay and the group.

Following the expiration of that MOU at the close of 2022, council several times deferred making a decision on whether to fund the organization again. By the time neighbouring Bay Bulls announced that it would be willing to accept sole responsibility for the BBBAA in November, the matter had not appeared on Witless Bay council’s agenda for many months.

Posted on January 17, 2024 .

Petty Harbour council adjusting capital works projects

By Mark Squibb

Petty Harbour-Maddox Cove council is paring back one capital works project and attempting to add to another.

During this week’s public meeting, council voted to reduce the scope of work for the storm runoff remediation and mitigation project to bring it within budget. The scope of work originally included Motion Bay Road, Motion Bay Road Extension, Skinner's Hill and Cribbies Road. Council will be removing Skinner's Hill and Cribbies Road from the project. Farrells Construction Ltd. was the lowest compliant bidder on the job, and will be named the successful bidder if it agrees to the changes made to the project to keep it within budget. Farrell’s initial bid came in at $95,195.

Council also voted to send a letter to the Provincial Government requesting additional funding for the Motion Bay Road Extension  watermain protection project as the consultant has deemed that a retaining wall is necessary to protect the road structure and to ensure sufficient cover is maintained over the watermain. It’s estimated that adding the retaining wall to the project will cost somewhere between $35,000 to $50,000.

If the extra funding is not available, the Town has requested that the wall be added to its recent application for the next phase, phase 2, of the Motion Bay Road Extension project.

The provincial and federal governments have contributed some $256,000 in funding for the project, which includes ditching and erosion control measures along the extension as well as reinstatement of the ground cover over the existing watermain that currently services some 211 homes. The hope is the upgrades will help control storm water runoff and prevent future erosion of the ground cover.

Posted on January 17, 2024 .

St. Vincent’s-Peter’s River-St. Stephen’s celebrates arrival of new fire truck

Residents of St. Vincent’s-St. Stephen’s-Peter’s River were glad to welcome a new fire truck to their town last week. From left are Fire Commissioner and Director of Fire Services Newfoundland and Labrador Robert Fowler, Fire Protection Officer Evan Woodford, councillor Angela Fleming, Lloyd Gibbons, Linda Gibbons, Rubert Hayward, councillor Cynthia Hicks, Harold Fleming, Fire Chief Brady Finlay, Assistant Chief Scott Making, Fergus Hayward, councillor Alton Stamp, Assistant Chief and councillor Peter St. Croix, Assistant Chief Gerard White, Paul Molloy, Doreen White, Jerome Stamp, Janice McDonald, Joan Hayward, Denise Fleming, Placentia-St. Mary’s MHA Sherry Gambin-Walsh, and Mayor Verna Hayward.

Posted on January 11, 2024 .