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Halifax small businesses told to relocate to make way for bus lanes
CBC
Halifax is proceeding with plans to widen Robie Street and implement a transit corridor on both sides from Young to Quinpool, but two small business owners say the project is moving forward at their expense.
Princess Octavious Gbana, owner of P3 Hair and Beauty Supplies, and Mark Giffin, owner of The Coastal Cafe next door, say they have received letters from the landlord they share informing them they'd have to move out by Aug. 31 because the city had purchased both buildings.
"It was shocking," Gbana said on Thursday. "I felt like it wasn't enough time, so I went into panic mode at first."
Approved by regional council in 2019, the first phase of the project added transit priority lanes to most of Robie Street between Quinpool and Young and on Young Street between Robie and Windsor.
But for the second phase, some parts of Robie will need to be widened to ensure the new bus lanes can be built on both sides of the street.
In a statement, the city said "the municipality is engaging with landowners to acquire property along this corridor" to complete the project, but that it can't speak to details surrounding confidential negotiations.
Once complete, the bus lanes will reduce congestion on Robie Street and improve transit travel time and reliability, the city says.
For Gbana, the news came as a total surprise. Her business caters predominantly to Black women. Many come from across the province to visit the store.
"It's not just a business for me.… I've built relationships with everyone. All my clients [are] like sisters"
She's been in the space since 2019 and has built a community around the shop in the years since opening.
But in those four years, the rental market in Halifax has only become more competitive, with prices rising and vacancies harder to come by.
After a lengthy search, Gbana signed a new lease on Barrington Street this week. She said she plans to move her business there as soon as possible.
But her new monthly rent will make it harder to break even. She said it's four times as expensive as what she's currently paying on Robie Street.
The Coastal Cafe opened in 2007 on Robie Street grew to be a much-loved business in its 16 years of operation.