Bas-Caraquet mayoralty candidate questions shipyard deal - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 02:48 AM | Calgary | -12.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Bas-Caraquet mayoralty candidate questions shipyard deal

A candidate running to become mayor of Bas-Caraquet says he probably would have rejected letting the village become part of a flawed financial deal surrounding a local shipyard.

Thophane Nol says he wouldn't have put the village on hook for millions

Premier Brian Gallant, Caraquet MLA Hdard Albert and Bas-Caraquet Mayor Agns Doiron at the announcement of $4 million in infrastructure funding for the shipyard, April 27, 2015. (GNB)

A candidate running to become mayor of Bas-Caraquet says he probably would have rejected letting the village become part of a flawed financial deal surrounding a local shipyard.

Thophane Nol, who was mayor from 1986 to 1991, says putting the village and the neighbouring town of Caraquet on the hook for millions of dollars in loans wasn't realistic.

The shipyard, the New Brunswick Naval Centre, is a non-profit corporation founded by the two municipalities and subsidized by the province and Ottawa.

The centre was incorporated to revive and run the long-dormant shipyard in Bas-Caraquet.

But the project ran into trouble last year when the centre was unable to borrow $4 million for infrastructure and $13 million for a new drydock.

Liberal cabinet minister Victor Boudreau announced Saturday that the government will buy the shipyard to ensure the work is completed. (CBC)
"By definition, a non-profit company has no money, because there are no investors in it," Nol told CBC News. "This is why I don't understand why the two levels of government accepted this formula.

"Most likely, if I had been there [as mayor], I would have refused this kind of formula. I would have preferred to go and get investors."

The centre's inability to borrow the money led several suppliers to file liens against the property last fall over unpaid bills.

One of them, Quebec's Groupe Ocan, which was building the drydock, halted work in December, throwing 28 people out of work.

Province buys shipyard

That forced the province to step in with more money.

On the weekend, Liberal cabinet minister Victor Boudreau announced that the government will buy the shipyard to ensure the work is completed.

Nol says he supports the goal of reviving the shipyard.

"Definitely if I'm elected, I will push to continue with the development of this industry."

But he says he has questions about why the initial agreement was set up the way it was, and about the details of the province's bailout.

The government says it will buy the facility for $1, pay off existing debts, and finish the existing infrastructure project for $10 million and other upgrades.

That includes a $13-million drydock and $15 million in other construction.

It will also hire a management company to run the shipyard.

But the bailout is conditional on Caraquet and Bas-Caraquet agreeing to continue funding the centre with $80,000 each per year for the next 10 years.

Property tax could be raised

Nol saidin a village of only 1,200 people, that expense will require a big increase in the property tax rate.

He saidif elected, he'll try to negotiate a deal with the province that softens the local impact.

Nol said incumbent Bas-Caraquet mayor Agns Doiron and her council "did their best with the information they had and the experience they have."

But he said he doesn't know why the New Brunswick and federal governments agreed to a financing deal that relied on two small municipalities being able to borrow millions of dollars.

"We have no information on that. I suppose the province supported the idea of a non-profit company, and this is my question: why?"

The Liberal government said cabinet documents prepared for them on the deal were 'inaccurate.' (www.simexperts.com)
Boudreau said this week the naval centre's role was set out by a preliminary deal put in place by the previous Progressive Conservative government and announced just days before the 2014 election campaign.

Boudreau said when the Liberals took office, cabinet documents prepared for them on the deal were "inaccurate" because they didn't mention the naval centre would have to borrow the money up front.

"I remember being under the impression the entire $13 million was Groupe Ocan's responsibility," Boudreau said on Monday.

Confusion over deal details

A government press release last May said Groupe Ocan "will invest" in building the drydock, but the Quebec company's spokesperson said in December that wasn't the case and it was up to the naval centre to come up with the money.

Denis Caron, who was the deputy minister of the Regional Development Corporation when the package was presented to the Liberal cabinet, refused to comment on Tuesday.

"In order to respect the confidentiality pertaining to Mr. Caron's previous responsibilities with the Province of New Brunswick, he is not in a position to comment on the file," said a spokesperson for the Port of Belledune, where Caron is now CEO.

Doiron, who is running for a third term as mayor against Nol, said on Tuesday she believed she was aware "from the start" that the naval centre would have to come up with the money.

But she said she couldn't be sure, and she refused to discuss the agreement in detail, hanging up her phone in mid-conversation.

The mayor of Caraquet,Kevin Hach,did not respond to calls from CBC News on Tuesday.

The centre was also supposed to raise $4 million from banks to match the province's $4-million infrastructure grant. Ottawa put in $2 million.

Nol says part of the problem is the naval centre, as a non-profit private company, doesn't have the same transparency obligation as the two municipalities that created it.

"There's kind of a trick there. It's very difficult to be transparent when you're running such a company."