
Door-to-door transportation service fills transit gap in rural St. Mary's
Darlene Naugle had difficulties getting around the small community of Port Bickerton on Nova Scotia's Eastern Shore when she moved to area from Alberta three years ago to care for her sick daughter.
The retiree was unable to run errands, like getting groceries, without a vehicle.
That changed for Naugle last October when a community transportation system called Smart-Go was introduced in the Municipality of the District of St. Mary's.
"I felt like I died and went to heaven because of the fact that I'm so isolated, I don't drive and I don't know anyone here," said Naugle.
'There was a big need for it'
The transportation program is run by the St. Mary's Association for Rural Transit, a non-profit dedicated to providing door-to-door, accessible service for the municipality's 2,300 residents.
The federal government said last September it was providing $185,000 for the program, while the province gave $800,000 to help buy vehicles and subsidize fares for low-income individuals.
Riders pay a $5 base fee plus 75 cents a kilometre. They are picked up at their home in one of two vans and taken where they need to go, including destinations outside the municipality like Halifax and Antigonish.
"There's a lot of seniors there. People were having difficulty getting to medical appointments," said Heather Kreffer, executive director of Smart-Go. "There was a big need for it, and the community knew."
Kreffer said there are more than a dozen people who use the service regularly, and that ridership is growing every month.
Similar transportation services already exist in other rural municipalities, including East Hants, St. Margaret's Bay and Victoria County.
Doug Wetmore of It's More Than Buses, a Halifax-based transit advocacy group, said expanding transit systems across the province starts with services like Smart-Go.
"You build up ridership from there and then expand the service," he said.
Expanding options
Wetmore hopes the province will eventually fill any transit gaps across province and that rural areas can be connected to larger services, like Halifax Transit.
"Making sure that those options are available is incredibly important in order to make sure that ... all of our communities are accessible within one another," said Wetmore.
Naugle said not only has the service helped her stay connected to her community, but its employees have become like family.
"I've never been in a situation like this in my life, being so isolated," she said. "But my experience is there needs to be more [transit] like it and people like them."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
4 hours ago
- CTV News
Mooseheads' singer faces difficult diagnosis
Mooseheads' singer faces difficult diagnosis The Halifax Mooseheads' anthem singer Peter Baylis has been diagnosed with a rare and aggressive form of brain cancer.


CTV News
4 hours ago
- CTV News
New Doctors Nova Scotia president to make family medicine a priority
Shelly McNeil was appointed as the new president of Doctors Nova Scotia. (Source: Facebook/Doctors Nova Scotia) As the new president of Doctors Nova Scotia, Shelly McNeil says her top priority is supporting family medicine. 'It's a key for specialists like me to do their job,' she told CTV News Atlantic's Todd Battis during an interview Wednesday. 'At the very core, it means every Nova Scotian has a family doctor.' McNeil, an infectious disease specialist based in Halifax, was installed as the new president of Doctors Nova Scotia during the association's annual conference last weekend. Her term will run for a year. Doctors Nova Scotia, which is the oldest medical association in Canada, aims to support physicians by negotiating with the provincial government, influencing the development of health-care policies and offering programs and services. The association currently represents more than 3,500 physicians. McNeil said she would like the province to move towards team-based care, which would be led by family physicians. She notes the association is also focused on recruitment and making Nova Scotia an attractive place to work. 'Make it a province that family doctors want to practice in,' she said. Shelly McNeil Shelly McNeil was appointed as the new president of Doctors Nova Scotia. (Source: Facebook/Doctors Nova Scotia) For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
As N.S officials discuss $4.5B hospital expansion, CEO says a new one likely needed, too
Karen Oldfield, the interim president and CEO of Nova Scotia Health, speaks to reporters after appearing before the province's public accounts committee where healthcare facilities were top of mind. (CTV Atlantic/Callum Smith) Officials in charge of the $7.4-billion QEII Halifax Infirmary expansion and maintenance project appeared before a legislative committee on Wednesday, offering some details – but not others – about where the project stands and where it's heading. During those discussions though, Karen Oldfield, the interim president and CEO of Nova Scotia Health, said a new hospital may also be required in the coming years. 'I don't want to presuppose an outcome, but I would be shocked if there was not some indication of another major or regional hospital being required in the Central Zone over the course of the planning horizon,' Oldfield said. 'I'm not announcing that, I'm not saying that,' she said. 'I'm intuiting that.' The population growth, particularly in the HRM, 'makes it very necessary to figure out just how we're going to build out the Central Zone,' she continued. But building is only part of the battle. She acknowledged staffing, timing and budgeting are only some components that need to be considered as part of the health authority's master plan. While speaking to reporters, Oldfield said several population factors will put even more pressure on the system. 'We're almost in a race against time to prepare for that peak to have the healthcare facilities ready, to have long-term care facilities ready. 'It's the demographics, it's the age, but it's also the baby boom that's hitting – I think it peaks out at 2035 – where a significant percentage of Nova Scotians are over age 65, and then it comes back down again,' Oldfield said. Acknowledging that a larger percentage of an aging population will likely lead to higher healthcare needs and long-term care needs. Oldfield said when she was appointed to her role by Premier Tim Houston in 2021, Nova Scotia Health did not have a 10-year capital plan, which makes it 'very difficult to plan when you don't have a long-term plan.' Construction update Oldfield said the QEII Halifax Infirmary expansion project's design phase is nearly 75 per cent completed, 'and that work is being shaped by those who use the spaces every day.' The first two cranes arrived last month and two more will arrive later this summer as part of the largest infrastructure project in the province's history. Construction crews started pouring the foundation last month and the concrete structure will rise to the main floor in December, 'marking a significant milestone,' said David Benoit, the CEO of Build Nova Scotia. Benoit reiterated numerous times to the Standing Committee on Public Accounts that the $7.4-billion price tag – including $4.5-billion in construction costs and $2.9-billion for 30-year maintenance costs – is part of a 'firm fixed price and schedule.' 'If things arise, like tariffs or hurricanes, or unexpected, unforeseeable things, there are clauses in the contract which allow for a conversation to happen,' he said. 'I'm comfortable that we got value for money, but you don't have to take my word for it,' Benoit told the committee. He told reporters a long-awaited 'value for money' document will be released to the public, likely within 'days.' When asked how tariffs could impact costs, John Volcko, PCL Constructors vice president of corporate development, said they learned a lot about price volatility and escalation during the COVID-19 pandemic. 'Within our bid, we've got certain allowances, certain contingencies to deal with unexpected things like that,' he told reporters. Interim Liberal leader Derek Mombourquette asked that the contract between the province and Plenary PCL Health (PPH) be tabled at the committee. The expansion will see a new, modern, 14-floor acute care tower with 216 beds, 16 operating rooms, a 48-bed intensive care unit and an emergency department that is nearly twice the size of the current one. It is expected to open in 2031. It's still not clear how many new staff will be needed and how many will come over from the Victoria General (VG) Hospital. Hotel rooms required At the construction peak for the QEII Halifax Infirmary project, there will be 850 to 1,000 workers, Volcko said. About two-thirds of those will be from Nova Scotia and the rest will come from out-of-province 'where there's just not sufficient skilled labour.' In response to a question from the NDP and Liberals, Benoit said there are ongoing discussions with Nova Scotia Community College about the void. For those workers coming from away, Volcko said 'there just was not sufficient time to put up a temporary lodging.' He said all 238 rooms at the Atlantica Hotel will be taken up by workers at some point. 'It's expected eventually we'll take over all the rooms and then there will be a tail where we don't need all the rooms again,' he told reporters. He couldn't say how many more rooms may be needed because he's not sure how many workers will be from out of town. 'Our first objective is to employ local talent, local skilled labour,' Volcko said. 'If our peak is in three years, you know, we've got some time to build a workforce.' Karen Oldfield Karen Oldfield, the interim president and CEO of Nova Scotia Health, speaks to reporters after appearing before the province's public accounts committee where healthcare facilities were top of mind. (CTV Atlantic/Callum Smith) For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page