Frontenac County council supports call to reinstate 2-ferry plan for Wolfe Island - Action News
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Ottawa

Frontenac County council supports call to reinstate 2-ferry plan for Wolfe Island

Frontenac County council has supported a push by residents of Wolfe Island to clarify with the provincewhether the community will be served by two ferries as originally planned or just one.

Councillor warns province might see the request as the region being 'very ungrateful'

The words Wolfe Islander III are written in big green letters on the side of a white ferry. It's a close up photo of the name. A grey brick building is in the background.
The Wolfe Islander III has been travelling between Kingston and the island since 1976. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Frontenac County council is supporting a push by residents of Wolfe Island to clarify with the provincewhether the community will be served by two ferries as originally planned orjust one.

The long-awaited Wolfe Islander IV was expected to joinits predecessor, which has recentlybeen plagued by reliability issues, sometime this spring.

Frontenac Islands MayorJudy Greenwood-Speers said Ontario's Ministry of Transportation (MTO)initially told islanders both ferries would be running, but thenshe and a fellow councillor wereinformed that's no longer the case.

At first, there was an outright denial from an MTOrepresentative that was ever the plan,the mayor told county council during its meeting Wednesday.

That was later amended to a statement there would be a one-ferry system for the "foreseeable future" due to staffing.

"The province has to stick to what they agreed to and the plans that were made around [it] even if it was a Liberal government at the time," said Greenwood-Speers.

"There's a lot that has to be solidified with this new minister to ensure our community isn't crushed."

Council ultimately voted in favour of backing up the township as itasks the ministryto reconsider the changeandfor clarity around the decision, along with consultation about the impacts and possiblemitigation.

Township asks province to reconsider

Greenwood-Speers'smotion notedformer transportation minister Stephen Del Ducasaidthe current ferry would be operating in tandem with the new one, effectively"doubling" the transportation capacity to the island.

It states the redesign of Kingston's ferry terminal includes far less parking because of that increased capacity and an assumption there would be lessneed for walk-on parking.

Icicles hang off the back of a ferry and the water bubbles up as it powers past a dock covered in construction equiptment.
The Wolfe Islander III leaves the Kingston docks on Jan. 31, 2023. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

The motion says the impact of that changeis "far reaching" and asked council to request Transportation Minister Caroline Mulroney immediately reconsider and reinstate the two-ferry plan.

If two-ferry service is delayed or not possible, the ministry should consult with the community about that decision and mitigation strategies for parking and emergency services, it adds.

The MTO did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Councillor says regionmay seem 'ungrateful'

North Frontenac Township Mayor Gary Lichty said he understands where Wolfe Islanders are coming from, but pushed back against the call for both boats.

"Why would you want a 45- or 50-year-old ferry that, when you read the internet, it's full of complaints," he said.

The aging Wolfe Islander III has dealt with reliability issues and safety concerns in recent months.

A Twitter account that shares service disruptions shows at least eight alreadythis year, half of which were due to mechanical issues.

The most recent occurred this past weekend, when MTO said the engine had to be changed unexpectedly, knocking it out of service for most of the day.

Lichtypointed out the province is spending millions of dollars on the new ferry and docks.

"If I was in Toronto and got this, I would look at it as the County of Frontenac being very ungrateful," he said of the motion.

Greenwood-Speerssaid her community made plans based on the understanding both ferries would be operating, including forpotential new development in Marysville, Wolfe Island's largest community.

County CAO Kelly Pender recalled attending a 2017 meeting in Kingston where the MTO promised two ferries in exchange for saving millions of dollars by not extending the docks for more parking.

"The City of Kingston made decisions, the County of Frontenac made decisions, Frontenac Islands made decisions, all based upon that fact that the ministry backtracked on two years ago without telling anybody," he said.