Dartmouth lakes weed problem subject of public meeting - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Dartmouth lakes weed problem subject of public meeting

In a meeting in Dartmouth Thursday night, the city of Halifax outlined three options to deal with weed infestations in Lake Banook and Lake Micmac in Dartmouth.

Options range from underwater weed-whacker to dredging the bottom of the lake

Fred Van Horne of Canoe Kayak Canada said the weeds cause boats to tip when paddles catch weeds. (CBC)

In a meeting in Dartmouth Thursday night, the city of Halifax outlined three optionsto deal with weed infestations in Lake Banook and Lake Micmac in Dartmouth.

The weeds hamperrowers and swimmers and have prompted complaints to the city.

About 60 people attended a public meeting Thursday to lay out options for managing weeds in Lake Banook and Lake MicMac. (Shaina Luck/CBC)

"The racing kayaks are very tippy, so if you were to take a stroke and catch weeds, there'd be a good chance you could fall out of your kayak," saidFred Van Horne of the Atlantic division ofCanoeKayak Canada.

The problemstarted in 2009 after the water level was dropped in the lakesto install a pipe along the shore, according to Cameron Deacoff, an environmental performance officer with the municipality.

"When that water level was lowered for that work, what happened is that the sediments at the bottom of those lakes were exposed to more light and wind and oxygen than usually happens,"he told CBCs Information Morning.

"The plant matter that was already residing in the sediments there had the chance to grow in a way that they didnt before."

He said the weed problem is most prevalent in shallow waters near shore.

Three possible options

The most expensive option to deal with the problem is to dig up and remove the sediment, a process that would cost about $1 million a year.

The city could also chop plants with an aquaticlawnmower-like machine. The device costs between $100,000 and $300,000, and the city would spendanother $20,000 a year to operate it. Contracting out the work would cost about $180,000 a year, Deacoff said.

The weeds exploded in 2009 when water levels were lowered to work on a sewer pipe. (CBC)

The least expensive option is to use an aquatic herbicide to the kill the weeds. It would cost about $119,000 per year.

A report to the city said there's no danger to humans or wildlife ifthe herbicide is applied properly.

"I guess I just really don't want to have to tell my daughter that the lake's closed because it's poisoned a week each year for the next five years," saidPam Rubin, a Dartmouth resident at the meeting.

Deacoffsaid Thursdays meeting is a chance for city staff to gauge what people in the community want to happen with the lakes.

The final decision isup to the Halifaxcouncil.