Councillors ground South Shore Flying Club rent relief request

The Region of Queens won’t give the South Shore Flying Club a break this year on its lease fee at the South Shore Regional Airport in Greenfield. (South Shore Flying Club)

The South Shore Flying Club’s request for a break on its rent at the South Shore Regional Airport had a rough landing at regional council on Tuesday evening.

Region of Queens councillors voted down a motion from District 6 Coun. Stewart Jenkins to forgive the flying club its $4,000 lease fee for 2025/26.

Jenkins was the only councillor who supported the motion.

“The club is more than just a club. They’re stewards of the airport,” he told councillors. “Years in the past, this region used to pay somebody thousands of dollars a year to sit at the airport just in case there was a plane come in.”

The municipality owns the small airport in Greenfield, but two years ago, it planned to sell it. 

Instead, the region signed 20-year leases in 2023 with the flying club and the Nova Scotia Drag Racers Association. The racing group pays $9,000 a year to lease the property for its events.

Under the flying club’s lease, it has access to the large hangar, but it also agreed to maintain the property for the region.

The club says now that it can no longer afford the annual fee. President Peter Gow wrote the newly elected council last October looking for the rent waiver.

He could not be reached Wednesday for an interview.

Jenkins said the club’s 34 members spend a lot of their own money maintaining the airport, terminal building, hangars and grounds. Three of the club’s members are also on call to respond to any problems at the airport, or to refuel a plane that’s landed.

“So we still have a viable airport. … But it’s also an asset that this region should be looking at seriously. And it’s also an asset that we pay very little to maintain. Everything else there is done by the club at their expense.”

According to the club’s financial statements, it recorded a loss in 2024 of $2,639.48. As of Dec. 31, it had a bank balance of $15,562.64.

Other councillors pointed to the club’s bank balance and its $25 annual membership fee, and said they could do more to raise revenue.

The club also spent $2,245 on clothing last year, as well as $1,241 on a new highway sign. Councillors said the club likely won’t have those expenses this year.

District 2 Coun. Maddie Charlton said she appreciates what the club does for the airport, but they also have a whole year to fundraise to help cover their costs.

And with budget talks coming up, she said she doesn’t want to commit to the rent waiver, especially with other groups in the region like the Queens County Food Bank asking for help.

“We are going into this budget process right now completely blind. We don’t know what our bottom line is. … I think it’s probably fair to say there will be some surprises there. We know we have huge infrastructure challenges. When I think about our strategic priorities, food insecurity is one of them, I think that would be an easy one (to assist) the food bank with the rent, but I don’t necessarily feel the same way with this ask at this time.”

After the meeting, Mayor Scott Christian said the club may be able to offset some of its operating costs through its application to the region’s Community Investment Fund.

The region usually announces the recipients of those grants later in the spring.

Email: rickconradqccr@gmail.com

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Region considers rent relief for South Shore Flying Club

The South Shore Flying Club maintains the South Shore Regional Airport in Greenfield as part of a lease agreement with the Region of Queens. (South Shore Flying Club Facbook page)

The South Shore Flying Club is looking for a break on its rent at the South Shore Regional Airport.

Peter Gow, president of the non-profit, says his group’s 35 to 40 members maintain the runway, hangars and grounds at the small airport in Greenfield.

“Between the insurance and the annual fee that we pay to the region, it kind of makes it pretty tight to keep operating,” he said in an interview Monday. “We’re just kind of run pretty thin.”

The flying club has asked the Region of Queens, which owns the airport, to waive the annual $4,000 rental fee.

Last October, Gow wrote to the newly elected council to ask for a break on the rent. District 6 Coun. Stewart Jenkins brought up the issue at last week’s council meeting. He asked councillors to support his motion for the rent waiver.

“They also provide a substantial service because they do keep an eye on the aiport, they clean it, they maintain it so that it can be used,” Jenkins told council last Tuesday.

“The problem is their limited revenue stream. Unlike other users of the airport, they don’t have 500 or 1,000 people coming to watch an event that pay money. It’s a small club with limited revenues.”

Two years ago, the region was on the verge of selling the airport. But after public backlash, municipal councillors decided to hold onto it

In spring 2023, the flying club and the Nova Scotia Drag Racers Association agreed to 20-year leases with the region.

Under the flying club’s lease, it has access to the large hangar, but it also agreed to maintain the property for the region. The drag racers have use of the small hangar.

“It was either we more or less agree to that or we don’t have an airport,” Gow says. “So we begrudgingly agreed to the lease with that stipulation that we would run it.”

Gow says the club has a few fundraising events each year, but it can’t sustain itself if it has to pay the rent on top of its annual $6,500 insurance bill.

“We try to do what we can here and there but everything is so expensive as everybody knows. It’s just kind of a bit of struggle. It just seems a bit odd that we pay a fee to operate the region’s facility.”

Gow said the small airport could help attract new residents to Queens County.

“We feel it’s very important. You take what’s going on around the world now, south of the border. Some of our American neighbours may consider moving to the area and that might be one of the things they look for — is there a viable airport there for someone who might have a small plane. It could make the difference between somebody moving to the South Shore and not.”

Last week, councillors said they were supportive of Jenkins’s motion, but voted to defer it to their next meeting on March 25 so they could get a look at the club’s financial statements.

Email: rickconradqccr@gmail.com

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Queens council cancels airport sale

A drag racers lifts the front wheels of a car as it starts a run down the track

Photo courtesy Nova Scotia Drag Racers Association. Credit: David Corkum

The Region of Queens will hold on to the South Shore Regional Airport after all.

Council voted 5-3 to retain ownership of the airport following a public meeting where supporters of both the South Shore Flying Club and the Nova Scotia Drag Racers Association made an argument for council to accept their purchase offer.

At $50,000 from the racers and $100,000 from the flyers, both offers came in under current market value of $565,000, which requires approval from six of eight councillors to be accepted.

For almost three hours supporters on both sides talked about the importance of the respective organizations and the value each brings to the community.

Director of the Nova Scotia Drag Racers Association Scott Sprague says it would have been great for his organization to have control of the airport so they could leave some of their infrastructure in place.

Sprague says 2022 has been a rollercoaster ride as the group moved from the need to negotiate a lease with a new owner in the spring to potentially becoming the new owner themselves.

While he is pleased both groups will still have use of the facility, he says the process has been frustrating.

“Certainly, to end up right back where we normally are, or were, after all this is hard to believe,” said Sprague.

As the process unfolded he said it was important for council to realize what each group contributed to the airport.

“Everyone was a little bit beaten and bruised from this and probably unnecessarily,” said Sprague. “I mean, the relationship was fine. We quite honestly didn’t really cross paths. In the sense that, we set up, we’re a temporary set up. That’s how it’s got to be if you’re going to have an airport too. So, we came and went.”

During the council meeting several of the councillors to the opportunity to apologize to both sides for stirring up bad feelings in a relationship that had worked so well for so many years.

President of the South Shore Flying Club Peter Gow appreciated the gesture.

“I think that speaks highly of anybody in a pretty stressful situation,’ said Gow. “And to acknowledge that maybe there were some things that could have been done differently.”

Many aviation group members spoke of the strategic importance of the South Shore Regional Airport and its location halfway between Halifax and Yarmouth.

The airport is used for pilot training, as landing for private aircraft, during emergency situations like forest fires, EHS air ambulance and search and rescue efforts, to name a few.

Mayor Darlene Norman acknowledged the essential uses of the airfield but expressed concern that all the aviation groups use the airport for free.

“There needs to be a way for the South Shore Fly Club [sic] to find a way to get revenue from all those people that claim the importance of the airport,” said Norman. “We heard from dozens today.”

Gow is hoping to see an expansion of hangars and services at the airport as it’s challenging for the flying club to raise funds from users.

“To try and come up with some ways to see if we can’t grow the facility at the same time maybe try and contribute financially. It’s tough, it’s really tough to do,” said Gow.

The drag racers and flying club will now look to sign new leases with the Region of Queens.

At the end of the day, both men said they are pleased to return to the status quo and look forward to finding their way back to the working relationship they enjoyed before this episode began.

E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
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Public to have say on regional airport sale

A long, brick building

Region of Queens Administration Building. Photo Ed Halverson

The hot real estate market apparently extends to airstrips as region of Queens looks to offload the South Shore Regional Airport.

The region is holding a public meeting Tuesday proposing to sell the airport to the Nova Scotia Drag Racing Association for $50,000.

Some are concerned that amount is too far below market value after a deal to sell the airport to a private developer for $565,000 fell through in October.

The municipal government act does allow the Region to sell the property to a non-profit organization for less than fair-market value.

The South Shore flying club has offered the region $100,000 to purchase the property and there are reports at least two other parties are interested and are offering to pay more.

The drag racers and the flying club have shared use of the airport for years and each say if their offer is accepted would continue that arrangement through a long-term lease.

In an open letter published to social media the drag racers say since they began in 2004, they’ve paid over $161,000 in lease fees to the region and invested $190,000 in improvements to the property.

The NSDRA says they’ve made other contributions to North Queens including $60,000 to local Volunteer Fire departments for their services, donating $13,000 to Christmas Daddies, and supporting dozens of local businesses buying supplies for their events.

The association says by the Region’s own estimates the NSDRA’s activities have contributed more than $4 million in tourism to the area.

The flying club says they too, have made several upgrades at no cost to the municipality.

Club president Peter Gow made a presentation to council at the November 8 meeting where he says the club was shocked to learn council had decided to sell the airport to the NSDRA without giving them an opportunity to bid.

Gow told council he’s concerned that despite assurances if the club is sold to the drag racers it will no longer operate as an airport due to the high cost of insuring the airplane fueling system and the NSDRA’s intention to increase the number of racers, cutting down on the time available for the flying club to use the airstrip.

Council will hear from the public before voting on whether to sell to the NSDRA during the regular council meeting.

E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
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