Donkin coal trucks too big for Port Morien-area roads, residents say - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Donkin coal trucks too big for Port Morien-area roads, residents say

Officials from Donkin mine, its trucking contractor and Nova Scotia's Transportation Department were on the hot seat at a public meeting Thursday night.

Community members say they don't feel safe because trucks are too big, roads inadequate

A truck hauling coal to Sydney from the Donkin mine pulls around a person walking on Long Beach Road. (Yvonne LeBlanc-Smith/CBC)

Officials from Donkin mine, its trucking contractor and Nova Scotia's Transportation Department were on the hot seat Thursday night.

Residents of Port Morien are upset over trucks hauling coal through their community.

About 85 people attended a meeting at the Port Morienlegion to ask about alternate plans to get coal from the mine near Glace Bay over to Sydney Harbour.

Many said they don't feel safe in their own community because the roads are inadequate and the trucks are too big.

Wilfred Campbell was one of many area residents who spoke out at a meeting in the Royal Canadian Legion in Port Morien on Thursday. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

Some residents, such as Leroy Peach, asked about a rail line.

"We don't have any quarrel with you, with your company," Peach said. "What we have a quarrel with is the whole idea of trucking."

Area residents said Highway 255 was built up to take coal truck traffic, but it is barelywide enough for two trucks. There are no sidewalks andthe shoulders are narrow.

Some suggested temporary solutions, such as reduced speeds, wider roads and an alternate route.

About 85 people attended the meeting to grill officials from Donkin mine, the Department of Transportation and Seaboard, which is the contractor hauling coal through Port Morien. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

Gerard Jessome, eastern district director for the Department of Transportation, told the crowd he heard their concerns and would take them up with the department.

However, he said Highway 255 won't be upgraded further until coal truck traffic increases.

In an interview after the meeting, Donkin vice-president Shannon Campbell said up to eight trucks a day haul coal from the mine to Sydney Harbour.

The trucks currently leave the mine gate and head south on Long Beach Road to Highway 255 in Port Morien. From there, they turn northtowards Glace Bay.

Shifting the problem

Routing some trucks through the community of Donkin could alleviate concerns in Port Morien, Campbell said.

But the province has only authorized one route so farand going through Donkin might just shift the problem elsewhere, he said.

"It's not inconceivable that we could have further discussions with the province on that, but I don't want to be in the same conversation at the Donkin fire hall as we're having here in Port Morien, so we'll have to work through that," Campbell said.

Some people suggested routing empty trucks through Donkin and full ones through Port Morien.

Campbell said he's not sure if that would workbecause coal trucks aren't the only vehicles accessing the mine.

Donkin mine vice-president Shannon Campbell says Kameron Coal is not commenting on the administrative penalties levied by Service Canada because the company has appealed the matter to the Federal Court. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

"Good question," he said. "What needs to be considered is that there still is a lot of delivery trucks that go through the Donkin highway, that choose to use the Donkin highway. So we'll have to take a look at what the actual truck count is.

"I don't want to make one change and then cause a bigger issue."

Campbell said the company is finalizing plans to build a road away from residential areas that would bypass Glace Bay altogether and join the highway near Sydney airport.

From there, the coal trucks could head straight into Sydney and reach the harbour via Sydney Port Access Road.

"Our plan is to build that road by the end of this year and get those trucks off that road," Campbell said.