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As smelter controversy simmers, Rouyn-Noranda voters opt for a former mining executive in Quebec election

A community trying to balance jobs with respect for the environment elects someone from the CAQ, hoping that having someone in government will mean better control of toxic emissions.

CAQ candidate Daniel Bernard wins riding by more than 4,000 votes

A man standing outside and smiling.
This is the third time Daniel Bernard has been elected as MNA for Rouyn-Noranda-Tmiscamingue riding, but the first time as a CAQ candidate. (Jean-Michel Cotnoir/Radio-Canada)

For many voters in Rouyn-Noranda, Que., a primary concern in this week's election was getting control of toxic emissions coming from the Horne copper smelter.

But instead of re-electing theleft-leaning, environmentalist Qubec Solidaire MNA milise Lessard-Therrien, they opted for the CoalitionAvenir Qubec (CAQ) candidate, Daniel Bernard, a former mining executive.

Before entering politics, Bernardworked in the mining industry as an engineer and as president of a number of mining companies in the region. He won the riding by more than 4,000 votes.

His win sealed the CAQ's victory across the Abitibi-Tmiscamingue region, where the party swept all three seats for the first time.

The results did not surprise Sharleen Sullivan, the executive director of Neighbours, a community organization for English-speakers in Rouyn-Noranda, 630 kilometres northwest of Montreal.

Bernard, she said, "is well-known to many of the residents here."

A man hugging a woman in front of a crowd of people and cameras.
Bernard celebrated his victory with his loved ones and supporters on Monday night. (Jean-Marc Belzile/Radio-Canada)

It isn't Bernard'sfirst time in public office. He has twicerepresented the riding at the National Assemblyin 2003 and 2008 but as a Liberal. He was also elected to city council in 2021.

Sullivan said she feels his experience helped him getelected but she thinks it suggests Rouyn-Noranda residents trusted him more than Lessard-Therrien to handle the contentious issue of arsenic emissions from the Horne smelter.

"It's a field where [Bernard] has a lot of knowledge. He knows what the machinery can do. He knows what the machinery can't do," she said.

Sullivansaid Bernard'soutlook on the situation was perhaps "more realistic" than Lessard-Therrien's. The QSMNA had maybe been too focused on the environment andfailed to consider the bigger picture, Sullivan said.

Clean air a priority for Bernard

Located in the centre of the city, the Horne smelter was a hot topic throughout the campaign.

It is currently allowed to emit an annual average of 100 nanograms of arsenic per cubic metre of air more than 33 times the provincial limit.

That historical exemptionhas come at the expense of the health ofresidents. A study released in June by Quebec's Institute of Public Health found that decades of exposure to arsenic and cadmium emissions has increased their risk of cancer and pulmonary disease.

Bernard, who ran on a promise to improve air quality in the region, reaffirmed his commitment Monday.

"I will be there to accompany [those living near the smelter] with all the key players in this file," he said.

The emission agreement between the province and Glencore Canada, which owns the smelter, is up for renewal in November.

Landscape with flowers in the foreground, lake in centre and industrial smokestacks in the background.
The two towers of the Horne Smelter can be seen from anywhere in the city of Rouyn-Noranda which sits by the Osisko Lake. (Sandra Hercegova/CBC)

Bernard said he is ready to work with everyone involved to find a solution that satisfies everyone.

"We want change when it comes to the smelter. The will is there for everyone," he said.

Sullivan, whose husband and father worked at the smelter, says she is optimistic. She said she has already noticed a big difference in the air quality today from when she was a child.

"There were times when the sulphur fallout was so bad that they would keep us in from recess," she said. "That hasn't happened in over 25 years, so there have been improvements."

Locals share hopes for future

Rouyn-Noranda resident Nicole Desgagnsnotes the support for the outgoing MNA remained steady but the CAQ siphoned off votes that normally would have gone to the Liberals or the Parti Qubcois.

"She didn't survive the [CAQ] tsunami," Desgagns.

Desgagns, a spokesperson for ARET, a citizens' group lobbying to end the smelter's toxic emissions, said the fight for cleaner air is not over.

Elected officials, she said, "have to take care of the health of citizens."

"The smelter has to respect the norms as quickly as possible."

A man standing outside.
Pictured here in June, Frdric Bonin is one of the doctors who signed an open letter to Franois Legault earlier this year to ask for quicker action on the arsenic emissions. (Jean-Marc Belzile/Radio-Canada)

Dr. Frdric Bonin, a family practitioner in Rouyn-Noranda, hopes having someone in government will help more than being represented by an opposition MNA.

Bonin was one of the doctors who signed an open letter calling on CAQ Premier Franois Legault to act quickly to protect the health of residents.

"We're confident that by talking to [Bernard], by explaining to him our view of [the situation], that he's going to be our ally and that he's going to represent us," he said.

Two man outside. One of them is standing behind a podium and talking.
Bonin said he hopes Bernard will be able to influence Franois Legault when it comes to taking decision on emissions. Legault is seen here with Bernard during a campaign visit he made to Rouyn-Noranda. (Mathieu Potvin/Radio-Canada)

As for Sullivan, she said she hopes Bernard will help the region buff up its tarnished image among tourists, who seem to have lostinterest in visiting a region that makes headlines for its heavy metal emissions.

She said she is also looking forward to getting scientific data on what emission level is safe for humans.

Sullivansaid she hopes having an MNA for the party in power representing the community will help residents get the "clear, precise information that we need."

With files from Franca Mignacca and Radio-Canada