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The investments will go toward rehabilitation work, road improvements, and hurricane recovery efforts.
ALMA, NB, Nov. 1, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — The network of protected areas managed through Parks Canada is a gateway to nature, history and 450,000 km² of stories from coast to coast. Investing in those sites is helping herbal and built heritage coverage, increasing climate resilience, and creating jobs in local communities, while providing visitors with meaningful, safe, and high-quality reporting across the country.
Today, Wayne Long, Member of Parliament for Saint John—Rothesay, on behalf of the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change and Minister responsible for Parks Canada, announced approximately $25 million in federal investments in infrastructure for conservation-related projects. the Torre Carleton Martello National Historic Site, as well as critical innovations on Highway 114 through Fundy National Park and Hurricane Fiona damaged the reclamation paintings in the park.
Funded through the $557 million investment announced by the Government of Canada at the end of 2022, a $14. 8 million investment will constitute the second and final phase of rehabilitation work at the Carleton Martello Tower National Historic Site. The work will include replacing the chimney control. It is located in the most sensitive part of the tower, with a light reproduction of the original, the structure of a new roof and the installation of a new humidity control and heating system. Work on the Carleton Martello Tower is expected to resume this fall and is expected to be completed and reopen to visitors in the summer of 2025. As with many assignments of this scale, the COVID-19 pandemic led to hard work and supply chain challenges, increases in curtain costs, and delays in assignments that may simply not be expected at the start of the task. Parks Canada is committed to maintaining the heritage value of this iconic cultural resource and a cornerstone of the local tourism industry.
As a component of this federal investment, $8. 3 million was also provided for critical road improvements along an 11 km segment of Highway 114 in Fundy National Park. These paints are expected to be completed this fall and will fix and resurface the road while improving various elements of the drainage infrastructure to increase the road’s climate resilience and longevity. These improvements aim to accommodate peak water flows, minimizing the threat of damage to infrastructure due to flooding and soil erosion in the long term. Highway 114 is a popular transportation hub for visitors and local communities, connecting Albert and Kings counties.
Through the Hurricane Fiona Recovery Fund (HFRF), coordinated through the Atlantic Canadian Opportunity Agency (ACOA), $1. 05 million is being allocated to Fundy National Park for recovery efforts resulting from the effects of Hurricane Fiona. The paintings include cutting down thousands of fallen trees to repair safe access to trails, campgrounds and roads, as well as repairing damage to park infrastructure. The effects of climate replacement on Parks Canada-managed sites are complex, and Parks Canada is committed to integrating climate replacement mitigation and adaptation measures. in his paintings.
Parks Canada’s broad infrastructure portfolio includes approximately 18,000 built assets, such as roads, bridges, dams and other marine infrastructure, historic buildings and fortifications, water and wastewater treatment facilities, campgrounds, guest centres, and operational buildings and complexes. Since 2015, the federal infrastructure investment program has enabled Parks Canada to improve the status of approximately 5,000 assets across the country. These enhancements help ensure public safety, the quality and reliability of guest offerings, integrate green technologies and climate resilience, while connecting Canadians to nature and history.
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“The Government of Canada is committed to rehabilitating the Carleton Martello Tower National Historic Site, an iconic Saint John’s landmark, and ensuring the sustainability of Parks Canada’s assets so that the cultural, environmental and economic energy that national heritage brings to Canada can continue. . the future. Parks Canada’s road improvements in Fundy National Park will give Canadians a safer experience to connect with nature. Parks Canada team members continue to work hard to ensure that the park fully recovers from the effects of Hurricane Fiona, while building resilient infrastructure capable of coping with the effects of increasingly damaging weather events. “
Wayne Long, Member of Parliament for Saint John—Rothesay
“The Government of Canada recognizes that the path to the affected regions of Atlantic Canada has been complicated and that the devastation of Hurricane Fiona is still being felt by many individuals, businesses and communities. Through the Hurricane Fiona Recovery Fund, we are executing heavily with businesses, organizations, and communities to rebuild them and make them more resilient to climate-induced weather conditions in the future.
The Honourable Gudie Hutchings, Minister of Rural Economic Development and Minister of Atlantic Canadian Opportunity Agency (ACOA)
Quick Facts
The Carleton Martello Tower National Historic Site overlooks Saint John, New Brunswick. Built by the British, the tower dates back to the War of 1812 and played a central role in the conflicts leading up to World War II as the center of Saint John’s defenses until 1944.
Since 2016, the Government of Canada has invested more than $11 million in the preservation and rehabilitation of the Carleton Martello Tower. Phase 1 ended in early 2021 and included measures to stabilize the exterior of the tower and fix its masonry; rehabilitation of the exterior stone wall and masonry stone core; and the layout of a temporary roof and drainage system.
Located in New Brunswick on Canada’s Atlantic coast, Fundy National Park stretches along 20 kilometers of stunning coastline along the Bay of Fundy. Famous for having the highest tides in the world, visitors delight in exceptional sightseeing, kayaking, and a unique experience. -Possibility to explore the seabed at low tide. More than 100 kilometers of bike trails wind through 206 square kilometers of Acadian forest, leading to thundering waterfalls, freshwater lakes, and picturesque river valleys.
Since 2015, more than $23. 8 million in federal infrastructure and conservation investments have been made in Fundy National Park, adding paintings on Highway 114, the main artery and transportation thoroughfare through the park for and the public.
On September 24 and 25, 2022, extratropical Cyclone Fiona, which still generates hurricane-force winds, made landfall over Atlantic Canada, bringing rainfall and primary winds to five provinces in eastern Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Quebec. and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Through the Hurricane Fiona Recovery Fund (HFRF), the federal government is offering up to $300 million over two years, starting in 2022, to local communities, businesses, and organizations impacted by the typhoon and long-term recovery efforts.
The Fund is coordinated through the Atlantic Canadian Opportunity Agency (ACOA), which works with other federal departments and agencies to address and identify local recovery needs, expand specific projects to assist in recovery and reconstruction, and allocate budget accordingly to the departments and agencies that will supply their percentage of the HFRF.
Related Products
Press Release: Government of Canada Invests $557 Million in Infrastructure Investment for Parks Canada
Associated Links
Parks Canada website
Carleton Martello Tower National Historic Site
Fundy National Park
Hurricane Fiona Recovery Fund
SOURCE Parks Canada
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