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VIDEO: 'I knew it wasn't going to be easy for people around Nova Scotia and I don't take that lightly'

Pictou Landing First Nation responds to Premier's announcement

Pictou Landing First Nation Cheif Andrea Paul addressed media along with community legal council Brian J. Herbert, Band Council and community members following the premier's announcement on Dec. 20.
Pictou Landing First Nation Cheif Andrea Paul addressed media along with community legal council Brian J. Herbert, Band Council and community members following the premier's announcement on Dec. 20. - Brendan Ahern

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The Mama Mia Burger | SaltWire

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PICTOU LANDING, N.S. — Miles away from anywhere on Dec. 20 a man was trapping.

The news could wait. The bobcats wouldn’t.

“My father used to trap, and his father used to trap,” said Durney Nicholas, 59. He had been away since 9 a.m.

Three hours later, with a full-grown bobcat over the front of his ATV he stopped to speak with his cousin Mary Nicholas who was walking not far from the edge of Boat Harbour's main lagoon. She tells him the news – The Boat Harbour Act will be honoured.

“I am surprised,” said Durney removing his winter face mask. “And happy now.”

When he was between four and five years old Durney recalls his sister walking with him to this place.

“I was young, but I remember,” he said. “About 90 per cent of the community would be here doing something – digging clams, mussels, fishing, always wishing. In winter too, fishing eels. In certain spots where the mud was soft, that’s where they’d spend the winter. We knew their spots. For generations and generations.”

The bobcat needed tanning and so Durney was off to where the news was ringing through Pictou Landing First Nation that Premier Stephen McNeil would honour the date.

“I’ll be 60 in January,” said Durney. “I hope to see it clean again.”

“We’ve seen it clean didn’t we Durney?” added Mary. “We’ve got to see it clean again. We have to.”

Durney Nicholas of Pictou Landing First Nation hearing the news from his cousin Mary Nicholas that the Boat Harbour Act will be honoured.

Durney Nicholas of Pictou Landing First Nation hearing the news from his cousin Mary Nicholas that the Boat Harbour Act will be honoured.

At around 10:40 that morning an exclamation went up inside the Pictou Landing First Nation band office, followed by tears. An emotional chief and council spoke to media shortly after, expressing gratitude to the Nova Scotia government, her council, elders and community.

“I know this wasn’t easy. I know that this was very challenging and I prayed and I prayed and I prayed for everyone. I appreciate the decision that was made today because I know that it was taken with extreme, extreme consideration for all parties.”

At 11:30 a.m., Brian Baarda, CEO of Northern Pulp’s parent company Paper Excellence announced that soon the company will be implementing plans to close the 52-year-old pulp and paper mill at Abercrombie Point.

The premier’s announcement included a $50 million transition fund to support the thousands of people for whom today’s news comes as a heavy blow before Christmas.

“It’s going to be a major economic blow for the county and Nova Scotia as a whole,” said Pictou County Chamber of Commerce chairman Blair Van Veld in an interview with The News. “Our thoughts are definitely with everyone in the forestry industry and the 300 people that worked at the mill.”

In Pictou Landing First Nation, a mural depicting Boat Harbour as it was when Durney and Mary remember it records the countdown: 41 days until Jan. 31, 2020.

Not far down the road, Mary is back inside her house. Friday’s news was another checkmark, but she will not celebrate until that day in January comes.

“We’ve been fooled so many times. So many times,” she said. “I don’t know how many times in my life where I felt like there was hope and then there was nothing.”

Mistrust, however, has not kept her from envisioning what will come next.

“I want to put in a garden. I want to farm there,” she said. “I’ve been thinking this way forever, and I could do it.”

Asked what she would grow, Nicholas replied: “Anything and everything. Anything they want and everything they want.”

Mary Nicholas walks a trail near the edge of the Boat Harbour Basin on Dec. 20, 2019, hours after Premier Stephen McNeil announced that the Nova Scotia Government will honour the 2015 Boat Harbour Act.

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