TREPA Annual General Meeting Coming Up

The TREPA AGM will happen at the Lake Vaughan Fire Hall on Wednesday, April 20. Mingling and snacks at 6:30 P.M. followed by our business meeting at 7:00.

This year’s speaker will be Eric Barr, a Director of Southwest Eco Energy Ltd.

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Free Rain Barrels for Home Assessment Participants

We in TREPA are very pleased to pass along the following announcement from the Clean Foundation’s Yarmouth Stormwater Program, which will start operating again this spring. “We” in the following announcement refers to folks in this program!

Clean Foundation’s Yarmouth Stormwater Program is a community-based approach to stormwater management that aims to raise awareness of excess stormwater problems. By engaging and educating the community through workshops, information sessions, demonstrations and one-on-one property consultations, we encourage individual actions to mitigate stormwater problems.

Property consultations are a large part of our work, and we are conducting them this summer. When you schedule a residential stormwater assessment, a member of our team will meet you at your home to view how stormwater currently affects your property and to recommend possible improvements.

The first 100 RainYards assessments will include a free rain barrel for use in collecting water.

Each consultation is absolutely free and includes a short questionnaire, a property visit and assessment, a personalized report and a brief follow-up interview. Any measures suggested are up to the homeowner to implement if desired – there is no obligation.

Please contact us to schedule a free property consultations – the appointment will be set to best fit your schedule.

We can be reached at:
Tel: (902) 420-7933
Email: stormwater@clean.ns.ca

For more information on some common types of stormwater management measures, check out our infographic at clean.ns.ca.

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Lobster Ticket Time

Hi All: It is Lobster Ticket Time again. It is your time to win! But you need a ticket. Here they are. You can make as many copies of them as you wish and get them to your friends in support of TREPA. Return filled out tickets with cheque.

Tickets

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Renewal Time

 

Membership time

It’s that time of  year again when we all re-new (or start) our memberships to support our favourite organizations. We are sure that TREPA is one of yours. Throughout the year we keep track of and take action on many environmental issues of interest to you. Activities are frequently reported here. Please help us maintain our vigilance by sending $10 membership fee to TREPA, Box 103, Tusket BS B0W 3M0.  Your help keeps us going. Please include you name, address and e-mail so that you may receive your tax receipt.

 

AGM announced

Our AGM is on April 20th at the Lake Vaughn Firehall. It will start with finger foods at 6:30 with the meeting and election of officers at 7:00. Hope to see you there. We will be making more announcements before then on a guest speaker and other items

Lobster Draw

We are in the process of getting ready for the annual Lobster Draw. We will be publishing the tickets on this website so be looking forward to them.

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Medway Lakes – TREPA response

The following comments were sent to the official site

medwaycomments@novascotia.ca

Comments on Medway Lakes Wilderness Area

Tusket River Environmental Protection Association (TREPA)

Box 103, Tusket, NS, B0W 3M0

 

TREPA is Southwest Nova Scotia’s premier environmental protection organization. We have been involved in wilderness protection issues for many years and were members of the task force that developed the Tobeatic Wilderness Area management plan. Many months of work incorporating a broad spectrum of interests groups were dedicated to establishing the principle that wilderness areas should remain free of motorized traffic.

It was a decision that was well discussed and opposed by the same groups who are today pushing, once again, to have all places open to the ease of access offered by motorization. But, in the end, for good reason, it was determined that there are some habitats in the province that are of such quality that they should be accessible only by foot or unpowered boats. People can hike, camp, canoe, fish and hunt in these areas and they can access the wilderness areas from adequate access points. People are invited to use the wilderness on the wildernesses’ terms.

The point of wilderness is to be wild. It is a special landscape and a reserve. Large areas of limited access lands provide a real sanctuary for game, particularly larger mammals. Water is protected for fish, and this area, Brook Trout if the lakes and rivers are sufficiently buffered from activity. The forests, heaths and wetlands remain protected to evolve over years and remain important baseline research and study sites. The wilderness cannot be wild if motorized access is allowed.

Furthermore, the Medway Lakes Wilderness Area occupies a large proportion of the catchment area of the headwaters of two major Nova Scotia river systems.  This makes their protection particularly important.

It has been our experience that a good percentage of the ATV riders have no respect for staying on access roads or designated corridors but feel free to wheel off to any accessible point they may wish to go. Our own CRK Allen Reserve has a central trail but there are ATV incursions along the well marked lake edge habitat of Plymouth Gentian that we are trying to protect. The marshes and wetlands of Yarmouth County are well marked with illegal ATV access tracks. Our government agencies do not have the staff or time to patrol and deal with the transgressions. Elimination of access roads is the only way to assure that wildlife and plant  habitat is protected and people who enjoy non-motorized recreation will have lands to enjoy.

We certainly have enough motorized accessible land in Nova Scotia to satisfy the need for that form of recreation.

Therefore, TREPA encourages the closure of all roads in the Medway Lakes Wilderness Area.

If this is a non-starter, we request minimum motor access, and closure of all roads which put the integrity of watercourses at risk. Existing gates should be maintained and kept locked except in cases of emergencies, in order to assure this. If the West Branch Road must be kept open, we request closure of the other road in the centre of the Wilderness area, compensatory expansion of the Wilderness area to increase watercourse protection, and a commitment that no new logging roads be built near the Wilderness area. The process which led to the decision to keep the West Branch Road open should also be made public. ATV Associations should also be obliged to partner with government in monitoring and enforcement activities to assure protection of the area.

We realize that the interests of many stakeholdrrs have to be weighed in making decisions, but preserving the ecological integrity of this wilderness area should be pre-eminent considering its importance to the considerable  chunk of southwest Nova Scotia which lies downstream.

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