Bay Ferries CEO calls for toned down rhetoric around Yarmouth ferry - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Bay Ferries CEO calls for toned down rhetoric around Yarmouth ferry

The president of Bay Ferries told a committee of the legislature excessive and nasty rhetoric surrounding the service between Yarmouth and Maine stands to harm the business.

Mark MacDonald, government officials appear before legislative committee

Bay Ferries CEO Mark MacDonald (second from left) and government officials appeared before a committee of the legislature Wednesday. (Michael Gorman/CBC)

Rhetoric that is "excessive" and "nasty" stands to harm the ferry service between Yarmouth and Maine, the president of Bay Ferries has told a committee of the Nova Scotia legislature.

Mark MacDonald, along with officials fromTourism Nova Scotia and the provincial Transportation Department, appeared Wednesday before the natural resources and economic development committee.

The meeting came as the government facescriticism for spending $8.5 million to renovate the ferry terminal in Bar Harbor, Maine, where the Cat ferry will sailthis summer.

MacDonald said he and other members of the company have learned to ignore political debate and focus on business, but that isn't the case for everyone.

"The problem is that our customers, partners, to some degree investors in the community ...can't ignore those comments," he said.

"It goes to our customers on the U.S. side and it goes to the people we're trying to do business with on the U.S. side, whether they be towns or cities or federal agencies."

Tory Leader Tim Houston said it's unclear if taxpayers are getting the best bang for their buck from the Yarmouth ferry. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

Tuesday's provincial budget allows for $13.8 million to operate the service this sailing season.

Following the meeting, MacDonald told reporters that as they try to sell the service to motor coach operators and tour companies, which tend to book a year or more in advance, they're often asked about the future of the service.

"They kind of look at us and say, 'What is going on up there?'" he said.

MacDonald said he understands politicians need to debate issues, but at times "it's just gotten a bit too much for the business."

He said the lawsuit by the Tories to gain access to the company'smanagement fee, and in particular the way it's been handled, is a prime example of the problem.

"Just file the appeal. To my understandingit was announced at a political convention and there were photo ops and everything else. File the appeal, put it before the courts, see what the courts say and get on with it. But don't try and turn it into a stunt," said MacDonald.

Yarmouth MLA Zach Churchill made the case Wednesday that opposition questions around the Yarmouth ferry harm its viability. (Robert Short/CBC News)

Much of the meeting included long preambles and statements from Tory Leader Tim Houston and YarmouthLiberal MLA ZachChurchill, even though neither are regular members of the committee.

At times the meetingappeared to be more of a debate between those two, with Churchill stressing the importance of the ferryto his region and Houston arguing theservice lacks accountability.

Houston told reporters he does not believe his party's approach to the file is affecting the business.

"When something's not going the way you hope or you plan, it's easy to blame somebody else," he said.

A blue and white ship emblazoned with the words
The Yarmouth ferry will begin sailing to Bar Harbor, Maine, in June. (Brett Ruskin/CBC)

Houston said Bay Ferries and the Liberal government are looking out for themselves, while he's looking out for tourism operators and taxpayers.

"We need to make sure that the investment is getting the [best] return that it can possibly get."

But Churchill and tourism industry members who attended the meeting don't see Houston as a champion.

"We are experiencing the revitalization of a sector that collapsed overnight when this service was gone," said Churchill.

He said there are economic indicators for the service and acknowledged they could be made more readily available. The government has said it willdo an economic impact analysis on the service once it's settled in Bar Harbor.

Michele Saran, CEO of Tourism Nova Scotia,said room nights sold in the western region of the province have jumped to 71 per cent from 41 per cent since the ferry service resumed.

Main Street in downtown Yarmouth. (Michael Gorman/CBC)

She said exit interview of tourists show ferry passengers stay longer in the province, spend more money and travel more broadly throughout the province than other visitors.

"I think the numbers that we have supporting the impact of the ferry from a tourism perspective are very compelling," she said.

Royden Trainor, senior executive director of policy and planning for the Transportation Department, said the move to Bar Harbor from Portland, Maine, offers the best long-term prospects of success for the service and bringing down the subsidy.

Trainor said the government expects the subsidy for the service could be below $10 million within a few years, depending on what happens with oil prices. He noted the shorter travel distance of the new route will reduce fuel consumption by about 40 per cent.

All of Bay Ferries' projections for moving to Bar Harbor were run by the government using a third-party evaluator, he added.

MacDonald informed the committee the lease agreement to use Bar Harbor's terminal includes a clause that would see payments returned to the company once traffic reaches a certain level.