Debris debate: What should happen with Fiona's remnants?
CBC
A year and a half after post-tropical storm Fiona ripped through Prince Edward Island, some are raising questions about how to deal with the debris that remains.
Provincial officials have estimated that 13 per cent of the woodland on the Island lost at least 70 per cent of its trees in the September 2022 storm.
The clean-up job was massive.
Crews worked for weeks to untangle a web of downed trees and power lines, while the P.E.I. government opened 41 disposal sites to its contractors and another 16 for people to drop off their Fiona debris free of charge.
"It's quite a large area full of everybody else's debris," said Monica Simpson, who lives next to one of the provincial disposal sites in St. Ann, just south of Cavendish.
Despite the province closing all the sites down at the end of October 2023, she said this one hasn't been cleared out in more than a year. In fact, she said the pile of debris has only gotten larger.
"People continually drop things," Simpson said. "They've had to push it back off the road several times."
It's also wildfire season across Canada. With the weather warming up, Simpson worries the pile of drying out trees and branches could be dangerous.
"Everybody else's fire hazard has now become our fire hazard," she said. "It's a large pile of wood that we would really like to see gone."
P.E.I.'s Department of Transportation and Infrastructure said it hopes to have all 16 sites cleared by the fall, and the plan is to have the site on Route 224 near Simpson's property done this spring.
There's a reason debris is still being added to the Route 224 property, said the owner of a local tree service company.
The work still isn't done.
"We will be [cleaning up] for a long time," said Chris Barrett, with Red Isle Arbortech.
"We're still cleaning up, honestly, debris from [post-tropical storm] Dorian [in 2019] in some of the sites."
Burlington MP Karina Gould gets boost from local young people after entering Liberal leadership race
A day after entering the Liberal leadership race, Burlington, Ont., MP and government House leader Karina Gould was cheered at a campaign launch party by local residents — including young people expressing hope the 37-year-old politician will represent their voices.
Two years after Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly declared she was taking the unprecedented step of moving to confiscate millions of dollars from a sanctioned Russian oligarch with assets in Canada, the government has not actually begun the court process to forfeit the money, let alone to hand it over to Ukrainian reconstruction — and it may never happen.