Fish-kill retrial wraps up for P.E.I. farm - Action News
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PEI

Fish-kill retrial wraps up for P.E.I. farm

The retrial wrapped up in P.E.I. court Thursday of Brookfield Gardens, accused in a fish kill in the North River four years ago.

'The standard is not perfection' says defence lawyer

More than a thousand fish were found dead in August 2014 after a heavy rainfall. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

Closing arguments Thursday in Charlottetown in the retrial of Brookfield Gardens centred on whether the farming operation did enough to guard against a fish kill that hit P.E.I.'s North River four years ago.

More than 1,000 fish were found dead following a heavy rain one night in August 2014.

"They took all reasonable steps to avoid that particularevent," defence lawyer RobertMacGregortold court.

"We can't justlook back in hindsight and say they should have done more."

MacGregorargued that Brookfield Gardens exceeded provincial guidelines by attempting to improve buffer zones and planting grassed headlands around an11-hectare (28-acre) field the company leased to grow carrots.

"The standard is not perfection," MacGregortold the court.

MacGregorpointed to the company's four-year crop rotation planas proof of the farmers' due diligence thelegal minimum is three years.

'They took a risk'

Federal prosecutor Jonathan Langlois-Sadubindescribed events differently.

The prosecutor told court Brookfield Gardens shouldn't have used the highly-sloped field in the first place, and chose to ignore signs of trouble to come.

"Their management of the field was motivated by business considerations," the prosecutor told court. "They took a risk but made no big investment in conservation ... Unfortunately in this case, the risk didn't pay off."

The three-day trialincluded prosecution testimony from two soil conservation experts.

Travis and GeraldDykerman, two of the three owners of the family-run enterprise, testified for the defence.

BrookfieldGardens has pleaded not guilty to a charge under the Fisheries Actofallowing release of a deleterious substance into a watercourse.

The company was acquitted on the same chargesback in 2015, but the P.E.I.Court of Appeal overturned that decision and ordered a new trial.

Provincial Court Judge John Douglas said he should have a decision in the case in late August.

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