Latest news with #SheetHarbour


CBC
09-07-2025
- CBC
Companies fined in case of engineer who drowned at Nova Scotia Power reservoir
Three companies have been ordered to pay a total of $260,000 for health and safety violations after an engineer drowned while working at a Nova Scotia Power reservoir in 2020. Andrew Gnazdowsky died on Oct. 16, 2020, after he went into the water to try to retrieve a piece of floating survey equipment that had malfunctioned in a reservoir in Sheet Harbour, N.S. In Halifax provincial court on July 3, Judge Elizabeth Buckle sentenced Gnazdowsky's employer, Brunswick Engineering and Consulting, to pay $102,000 in penalties for two violations of Nova Scotia's Occupational Health and Safety Act. She found the Saint John company failed to ensure safe work practices related to working on water — and using equipment on water — were adequate and implemented, and that the company failed to provide rescue equipment when there was a risk of drowning. Gemtec Consulting Engineering and Scientists Ltd. of Fredericton was fined $61,750 and Nova Scotia Power was fined $96,250, both for failing to ensure Brunswick Engineering employees were provided with rescue equipment due to the risk of drowning. There was no rescue boat on site when Gnazdowsky died. The Public Prosecution Service said the penalties would include victim surcharges and contributions to the labour minister's education fund. The three companies were charged in 2022 and convicted in August 2024. During a two-day sentencing hearing in March, Gnazdowsky's mother, father and sister — who was vocal about calling for accountability following her brother's death — were among the 15 people who delivered victim impact statements. They told the court their family would "never be the same" and they've struggled since the tragedy. Defence lawyers representing the three companies had argued penalties should reflect the offence their clients were convicted of and nothing more, pointing out the absence of a rescue boat didn't directly cause Andrew Gnazdowsky to die. They proposed fines ranging from $30,000 for Gemtec to $50,000 for Nova Scotia Power. Crown prosecutor Alex Keaveny had argued a maximum fine of $200,000 for Nova Scotia Power would act as a deterrent to other companies.


CTV News
03-07-2025
- CTV News
Missing man from Sheet Harbour, N.S. found dead
A man who was reported missing from Sheet Harbour, N.S. last month has been found deceased. The 40-year-old was last seen on May 25, and the police had been actively searching for him. The RCMP say they are not treating the death as suspicious in nature, but the investigation is ongoing. For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CTV News
26-06-2025
- Business
- CTV News
NS Power gets Fisheries Act approval for Ruth Falls dam refurbishment project
Five years after making its initial application, Nova Scotia Power has received Fisheries Act authorization for its Ruth Falls dam refurbishment project, but it will need to resubmit a request to the provincial energy board to secure necessary funds for the work. The utility is seeking approval for an extra $8.2 million for the dam project in Sheet Harbour through an overspending application, but last week the Nova Scotia Energy Board ruled it would hold off on that request until Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) provided a Fisheries Act authorization. The written decision from the board noted that Nova Scotia Power applied for the authorization in December 2019, but received a response in March 2020 that outlined 'significant additional work required based on DFO's conclusion that the proposed activities were likely to harm fish and fish habitat.' The utility made further submissions from August 2020 to September 2023. It made its most recent submission last February. According to the Government of Canada website, the Ruth Falls dam project received the necessary Fisheries Act authorization on June 17. 'A drawdown of the Ruth Falls Headpond, approximately 18 feet below minimum operating level, will begin on or after July 21, 2025, with no upstream fish passage until the reservoir is rewatered by April 1, 2026,' the website reads. 'The 9-month project will permanently impact about 60 m² of fish habitat and temporarily disrupt 1.15 km² due to the drawdown.' Following the approval, the utility can now submit an amended authorization to overspend application to the energy board. Nova Scotia Power says the dam upgrades include: building a new steel walkway platform along the length of the dam improving the upstream fishway resurfacing the concrete spillway surface replacing 30 stoplog bays with seven rubber dam sections The project is expected to add 50 years to the dam, which was built in 1925. In its original application to the Nova Scotia Energy Board, the utility said the project – which was originally earmarked for $7.2 million – is now expected to cost $15.4 million. It cited the issues obtaining the environmental permits and the extended construction timeline as reasons for the added costs. For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CTV News
20-06-2025
- Business
- CTV News
NS Power now expects Ruth Falls dam refurbishment to cost $15M
Nova Scotia Power says the refurbishment of a dam in Sheet Harbour – which was originally expected to cost $7.2 million – is now estimated to run up a $15.4-million bill due to environmental permitting and an extended construction timeline. The utility submitted an authorization to overspend application to the Nova Scotia Energy Board, seeking approval for an extra $8.2 million for the Ruth Falls Main Dam Refurbishment Project. The board originally approved the project in May 2019. In its written decision Wednesday, the board said it would hold the application in abeyance until the utility gets the Fisheries Act authorization from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO). The board says an amendment to the federal Fisheries Act received royal assent in June 2019. The changes required Nova Scotia Power to receive authorization from the DFO for the Ruth Falls project. 'In December 2019, NS Power submitted a review request to DFO for its proposed Ruth Falls main dam refurbishment work,' the decision reads. 'In March 2020, the Utility received a response from DFO outlining significant additional work required based on DFO's conclusion that the proposed activities were likely to harm fish and fish habitat, necessitating an FAA under the new Fisheries Act. In response, NS Power submitted an FAA application to DFO in June 2020. 'The Utility subsequently received four 'incomplete' submission letters from DFO between August 2020 and September 2023, each requesting additional information from NS Power. According to NS Power, each letter contained requests and requirements that had not been requested in earlier DFO correspondence. NS Power's most recent FAA submission was on February 28, 2025.' The utility told the board the work to obtain the environmental permits from the DFO, the Nova Scotia Department of Environment and Climate Change, and Transport Canada's Navigation Protection Program constitute $4.4 million of its $8.2-million request. The utility said the need to address additional environmental permits extended the construction timeline, which increased project costs by roughly $2 million. The utility also said the costs related to archaeology and Mi'kmaq engagement added $400,000 to the project. According to the decision, Nova Scotia Power had a consultant assess the design of Sheet Harbour Hydro System's water retaining structure in 2015. The report found the Ruth Falls main dam, which contains three generating units with a total capacity of 7.2 MW, required 'corrective action.' The dam, which was built in 1925, has an 8,000-foot power canal and a spillway that stretches 1,190 feet. The refurbishment project is expected to extend to the life of the dam by 50 years. The Nova Scotia Power website says the upgrades to the dam include: building a new steel walkway platform along the length of the dam improving the upstream fishway resurfacing the concrete spillway surface replacing 30 stoplog bays with seven rubber dam sections The utility's current project timeline says it will start refurbishment of the dam in July and wrap up next March. Nova Scotia Power told the board the cost of decommissioning the dam is an estimated $84.5 million. The board said once the utility receives authorization from the DFO, it can submit an amended authorization to overspend application. For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CTV News
16-06-2025
- CTV News
N.S. RCMP continue search for missing Sheet Harbour man
Brian John Matthew Warrington was last seen on May 25 in Sheet Harbour, N.S. (Source: RCMP) The RCMP is continuing to search for 40-year-old Brian John Matthew Warrington, who was last seen on May 25 in Sheet Harbour, N.S. Ground search and rescue (GSAR) teams, RCMP and GSAR remotely piloted aircraft system operators have been searching the Sheet Harbour area, along the East River and on Highway 7 and Highway 224, since Warrington disappeared. Police say Warrington is known to hitchhike. He is described as six-feet-tall and 210 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. He walks with a limp. There is currently no clothing description available. Investigators are trying to establish a timeline of Warrington's disappearance. They are asking anyone with camera footage, especially dashcam video of Highway 7 in Sheet Harbour from 4 p.m. on May 24 to 9 p.m. on May 25, to contact police. Anyone with information on Warrington's whereabouts is asked to contact police at 902-490-5020. For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page