Acadian groups propose a new national park for the Chignecto Isthmus
Acadian groups have proposed a new national park on the Chignecto Isthmus, partially in hopes of securing federal support to protect the dykeland system from increasing risk of flooding due to extreme storms and sea level rise.
“It would be a really nice way to recognize our history and heritage,” says director of the Société de l’Acadie du Nouveau-Brunswick (SANB), Nicole Arseneau-Sluyter. “And for economic purposes, being the connection between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, for the rest of Canada.”
But there are some concerns the idea could complicate the protection of the Isthmus. Leon Landry, president of the Cumberland Acadian Society, likes the idea of a Chignecto Isthmus National Park, but is worried that attaching a new national park to the protection of the isthmus could “create more red tape.”
The SANB and their counterparts from Nova Scotia and Atlantic Canada submitted a brief pitching the Chignecto Isthmus National Park to a Senate committee on Transportation and Community last month.
The groups say a national park on the Isthmus would have three benefits. First, it would involve multiple federal departments in the protection of the Isthmus against risks brought on by climate change. Secondly, it could allow two heritage institutions, Fort Beauséjour in New Brunwwick and Fort Lawrence in Nova Scotia, to be combined into one site. And lastly, it could preserve and promote the history and culture of the Mi’kmaq and Acadians of Beaubassin.… Continue