Business owners band together to promote 'truth about Parlee Beach' - Action News
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New Brunswick

Business owners band together to promote 'truth about Parlee Beach'

New Brunswick's most popular tourist attraction has suffered decreasing attendance including a visitor drop of 25 per cent last summer ever since word of its water-contamination problems spread.

Group believes environmental activists have hurt beach's reputation

Luc LeBlanc says it was time for the Shediac-area business community to speak its mind. (CBC)

A group of business owners inShediacis banding together to promote what it says are the real facts aboutParleeBeach.

The popular beach has suffered from decreasing attendance including a visitor drop of 25 per cent last summer, ever since word of its water-contamination problems spread.

The move is the latestattempt by some to restore a positiveimage for the beach.

In June, an article in The Insider, a U.S. online magazine, placed Parlee in a list of 13 dirtiest beaches in world, along with polluted beaches in Brazil, India and Senegal.

The blog is not a mainstream publication, but regardless, the New Brunswick Department of Tourism threatened to sueif the article was not pulled from the website.

Public image campaign

Now, a group called Citizens of the Truth about Parlee Beach, led by Shediac business owners who have suffered from the dwindling numbers, has launched a website and a public campaign.

The group hired public relations firm M5 to help lead the efforts.

"We think the media coverage in the last two, three years doesn't reflect the facts," Luc LeBlanc, owner of the ParleeBeach motel, told Radio-Canada last week.

A website, The Truth about Parlee Beach, was launched last week. (CBC)

"Some groups suggest the beach is polluted," he said. "Based on the facts in 2017 and 2018, we consider that's not the case."

Last summer, the office of the chief medical officer of health found thewater wasunsafe for swimming eight times because of high levels of fecal bacteria.

"There's too much misinformation," said LeBlanc.

Bashes environmental groups

The group's position is that environmentalists have given the popular beach a bad reputation, and that reports about the poor water quality are simply false orunfounded.

LeBlancbelieves the water is safe for swimming, and he accuses environmental groups of misrepresenting the facts in an attemptto stop development along the shore.

"They'll take whatever means for that," LeBlanctold Radio-Canada. "Us, it's only truth we're after no ulterior motives."

Parlee Beach is New Brunswick's most popular tourist attraction. (CBC)

So far this summer, no-swimming advisories have been issued twice because of fecal bacteria one aftera sample found bacteria almost 30 times above safe levels.

The group said because many more samples turned up within accepted standards, there is no chronic issue at Parlee Beach, echoing what the province has been saying in the last few months, includingHealth MinisterBenotBourque, who toldCBCNews in an interview the water quality atParleeBeach was excellent and there was no risk to young children or the elderly.

Flip-flopping

When the controversy surrounding Parlee Beach broke out two years ago, the province initially deniedthere was a water quality problem.

After CBC'sreporting,the government acknowledged the pollution going back decades and put new measures in place, including following the guidelines for Canadian recreational water quality.

Business owners have agreed the government'saction has been a good thing and would like to see that continue.

There were 11 no-swimming advisories in the peak summer months of June, July and August in 2018 because of high fecal bacteria. (CBC)

The province began work to replace the beach's sewage system, which a report said could be leaking, and the work will be completed in the fall.

It isalso doing a study this summer on the impact that private septic tanks at cottages and RVs could have on the water quality.