In a statement, officials with Bay Ferries said they are committed to providing high-quality service on all of the company's runs, which also include services between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and P.E.I. The minister, who represents the district of Queens, said she's met people through the summer who have travelled to the province on the ferry and business operators who have benefited from ferry traffic. Kim Masland is the minister of Public Works for Nova Scotia. Masland said there has not been an economic impact analysis of the service so far, although she said there has been consultation with the hotel sector about what the ferry has meant for business. "We know that passengers coming off the ferry tend to spend twice as much time here and twice as much money as those travelling in by air or by land." Its contract with the province, which runs until 2026, includes millions of dollars in operational support each year.Ĭhurchill, who noted that other ferry services travelling to and from Nova Scotia also receive government support, said it's money well spent. The service resumed under a different operator in 2014, before Bay Ferries ultimately resumed operation of the service in 2016. The former NDP government cancelled financial support for the service in 2009, which led to the end of the run. (Michael Gorman/CBC)Ĭhurchill called the ferry "the driving force" of the southwest region's tourism economy and said the region is finally seeing reinvestment and rebuilding in the sector. Liberal Leader Zach Churchill says the ferry service to Maine delivers high-value tourists to Nova Scotia. "People have been feeling really good about it this summer and I know a lot of people are going to be very concerned about the comments that were made today," he told reporters in Halifax. Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, the MLA for Yarmouth, has a different view than Masland when it comes to the ferry ridership this season.Ĭhurchill said it is "really quite a phenomenal feat" that the service is as close as it is to numbers from pre-pandemic seasons. Masland called the numbers "very disappointing." The 20 seasons were lost to the COVID-19 pandemic.Įarlier this month, the company announced it has sold about 35,000 tickets so far and is on pace to carry up to 41,000 passengers this season, numbers that would be similar to the performance between the 20 seasons. The 2019 sailing season was lost because of delays in the transition from Portland, Maine, to Bar Harbor as port of call in the United States. The ferry, which travels between Yarmouth, N.S., and Bar Harbor, Maine, resumed service in May after a three-year hiatus, and will run until mid-October. "The bottom line is, is we need to make sure that Nova Scotians are getting the best value and that the service is the best service for our province." Masland said the year-end analysis would include examining the travel market, operational costs and the value the ferry provides to the province's tourism industry. "That would be a possibility, yes, absolutely," Masland told reporters during a video conference on Thursday. Public Works Minister Kim Masland says officials with the provincial government will meet with Bay Ferries officials at the end of the tourist season to discuss the future of the Nova Scotia-to-Maine ferry service and one option could be discontinuing the service.
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