Eastern P.E.I. businesses gather to express concerns about reliability of Wood Islands ferry
CBC
Businesses in Eastern Prince Edward Island are still feeling ripple effects from Northumberland Ferries Ltd. cancellations and delays earlier in the summer season, people who gathered in Montague Tuesday night were told.
The ferry service between Wood Islands, P.E.I., and Caribou, N.S., is running smoothly at the moment, departing from each side of the Northumberland Strait eight times daily.
Not so earlier in the season, when the 30-year-old MV Confederation was out of service due to broken engine parts — with the exception of a few crossings on the Canada Day weekend — from June 17 to July 10. With the leased Quebec ferry MV Saaremaa 1 still in drydock, no boat was available to take passengers and vehicles across the strait.
"It's very frustrating for our members," said Blair Aitken, president of the Eastern P.E.I. Chamber of Commerce. "The impact hurts. It just hurts."
The board was so concerned about the ferry service that it organized a public meeting on the topic, and more than 70 people piled into a room at Lanes Riverhouse Inn in Montague Tuesday night.
Aitken said it wasn't just tourism businesses that suffered while MV Confederation was tied up; transport and forestry businesses need a reliable ferry as an alternative to using the Confederation Bridge on the other end of the Island.
"I've spoken to members of our chamber whose businesses at this time of year rely on the ferry," Aitken said. "Having to go to the bridge and make that long round [way] about... added hundreds of dollars per trip."
Mechanical problems happen, but the chamber of commerce sees a bigger issue at play.
"We're afraid of the traveling public losing faith in the service and therefore just avoiding it. And really all that does is takes us on a downward spiral on the viability of the service itself," Aitken said.
Many people at the meeting said Northumberland Ferries Ltd., which operates the service using vessels owned by Transport Canada, should have a contingency plan for issues like mechanical failure.
"You need two [vessels]. You need a back-up. It has to be running all year round. We need to be a four-season destination," said Jeffery Haight, who runs The Boys Comfort Cuisine.
Haight's business is located in Vernon Bridge, well on the way to Charlottetown, but he provides catering services and meals to campgrounds, cottages and other businesses in Eastern P.E.I.
"Our sales to tourists so far this year are $610," he said. After the Confederation stopped running, he added: "We noticed a 53-per-cent drop within two weeks."
The other ferry on NFL's peak summer run, MV Holiday Island, was sent for scrapping after a fire last year. MV Saaremaa 1, a temporary replacement for the Holiday Island, started sailing last week but its owner has reserved the right to call it back if it's needed to replace an out-of-commission ferry on a Quebec route.