Parents of man killed in Lac-Mgantic disaster don't want tracks moved next door - Action News
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Parents of man killed in Lac-Mgantic disaster don't want tracks moved next door

Ren Boutin and Isabelle Boulanger lost their son Frdric in the 2013 Lac-Mgantic train explosion that killed 47 people. Now theyre fighting to keep the railway tracks from being relocated close to their house.

Municipality, citizens group tell BAPE railway must be relocated so trains no longer go through town centre

Ren Boutin does not want the Lac-Mgantic train tracks to be moved to within 300 metres of his home. 'I lost my son. I think Ive given enough,' he said at Monday's environmental review board hearing. (Radio-Canada)

Ever since a tanker-train carrying crude oil derailed and exploded, Lac-Mgantic residents have been calling for the train tracks that run through the centre of town to be moved, to skirt around the municipality.

People living in townsay they still feel stressed every time a train rolls through.

The municipality has a preferred new route. However, it would mean laying tracks within 300 metres of the Boulanger-Boutin home in the nearby townof Frontenac.

"The idea ofseeing the train pass in front of our house and hearing it everydayI won't be able toendureit," said Boulanger at a provincial environmental review board (BAPE) consultation hearing Monday night.

5 optionsincludedoing nothing

BAPE is considering five options: doing nothing, improving the safety of the tracks at their current location, and three different routes for the tracks' relocation.
Isabelle Boulanger says no plan to reroute the tracks would be fair to everyone. 'We would just be relocating the problem without solving it,' she said at Monday night's hearing. (Radio-Canada)

Boulanger says no rerouting option would be fair to everyone.

Any bypass will have an environmental and social impact for every person touched by the detour, she said, whether it be the loss of land, a poorer quality of life or a decline in property values. As well, she said, moving the tracks wouldn't make train transport of hazardous goods any safer.

"We would just be relocating the problem without solving it," she told the review board.

Boulanger and Boutin said authorities should concentrate on writing stiffer laws and ensuring train tracks are properly maintained.

"The problem wasn't really the railway tracks." Boutin said."It wasnegligence: no driver. Leaving [the train] parked there without supervision. Everything. I don't really want that near my place."

"Those who build next to the train tracks, that's a choice they made. Me, I chose not to build next to a railway."

People of Lac Mgantic 'can't breathe'

However, Lac Mgantic Mayor Jean-Guy Cloutier's position is firm.

"We want a bypass, and that's all," Cloutiersaid.
Robert Bellefleur, the spokesperson for a coalition of citizens, said people living in downtown Lac-Mgantic live in fear of another train tragedy. (Radio-Canada)

"The population can't breathe when it sees those trains pass," echoedRobert Bellefleur, a spokesperson for a coalition of citizens and groups dedicated to rail safety.

"They have the right to finally live in peace."

Bellefleur said he can understand how people like Boulanger and Boutin feel about the bypass, but he thinks money might make up for it.

"There are ways to be compensated when part of your land is expropriated," he said."People need to put the collective good ahead of their individual well-being."

Boutin is unconvinced.

"I lost my son," Boutin said. "I think I've given enough."

Roughly 150 people attended the BAPE hearing in Lac-Mgantic Monday to discuss options for relocating the train tracks that run through the centre of town. (Radio-Canada)

With files from Radio-Canada's Marie-Hlne Rousseau