Liverpool residents vent frustrations over ongoing work on Waterloo Street

Residents on Waterloo Street in Liverpool appealed to Region of Queens councillors this week to speed up work on the street. (Rick Conrad)

Residents living on and around Waterloo Street in downtown Liverpool are frustrated with water and sewer upgrades that have been going on for three years.

Christopher Clarke, a former Region of Queens mayor who lives on Bootlegger Road at the end of Waterloo, told councillors this week that the project has disrupted residents’ lives for long enough.

“It’s a disgrace. … For three years, our street has been dug up, and it now, based on a letter that we were sent, looks as though it will go into the fourth year. The construction is being done there with very little consideration to the residents. The place is a mess.”

The work begins at the corner of School and Waterloo streets and extends down the narrow residential street to the water.

Clarke said heavy equipment has been left on the street, signs toppled on people’s lawns, pipes left lying everywhere. Also, a temporary traffic light is set up and the noise from the generator disturbs residents at night.

“Now, I don’t for one minute, criticize the employees who are working there. … This is a very, very badly managed project. And so maybe that’s where the blame should lie.”

And he said he was insulted when the region recently sent residents a letter with an update on the project and told them not to talk about the problems with anybody else but senior staff.

“I didn’t elect the manager. I helped to elect the mayor and the councillor. So if I want to come and talk to anybody, I’m going to come and do it. 
I’m not going to be told by staff that I’m not allowed to come and talk. But you’ve got to do something to help us. It’s a mess, it’s muddy, it’s going into next year. 

“Shut the project down, you know you’re not going to get it done this year. … Fix up the street for us, get at it properly next year, do the job, and plan it. It is an absolute disgrace. I would be ashamed to sit in front of the public and tell them that I am responsible for a job like that.”

Waterloo Street resident Paula Doucet echoed Clarke’s concerns. She told councillors that the work is progressing too slowly and that crews don’t appear to be onsite full time.

She added that elderly residents and those with mobility issues also find it difficult to navigate around the work and the equipment.

“We have two big diggers on our street. 
One appears to be working. One isn’t working,” she said.

“We’re paying a lot of taxes and I’m getting really tired of this project. You know, I know it needs to be done, I know it will be great when it’s finished. 
Get it done! If you’ve got to hire more contractors to come in, get it done.”

Mayor Scott Christian said he understood the residents’ concerns.

“I appreciate your frustrations and thank you for your patience, and, yes, we do need to ensure that you have a better experience with respect to that project, so I apologize on behalf of the organization.”

Christian could not be reached for a followup interview.

Email: rickconradqccr@gmail.com

Queens working to attracting new family practice physicians through satellite residency program

exterior of Queens General Hospital

Exterior of Queens General Hospital. Photo Ed Halverson

Queens General Hospital will be welcoming four new family medicine residents over the next two years.

One resident starting in August another in December and two more joining next year will each spend 5 months training alongside family medicine doctors in Queens.

The influx of student doctors is part of the Dalhousie Family Medicine Residency Satellite program being operated in partnership with Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia Health, and the Queens General Hospital Foundation.

Doctor Tarah Millen practices on the South Shore and helps mentor residents.

She says a residency in a rural area helps patients get access to medical care and provides residents with learning opportunities they may not get in a larger centre.

“Lots more hands-on because there’s many learners in the city and here there’s less amounts of learners and they can get lots of hand-on experience with wonderful physicians and preceptors.”

Millen says that hands on experience will extend to many corners of the hospital.

“They’ll be working with the family doctors who work at Queens General Hospital. They’ll be spending time with them doing a variety of things including clinic, emergency room, hospitalist, and long-term care facility.”

Dr Amy McMullin works at Queens General and says the partnerships between Nova Scotia Health and the Queens General Hospital Foundation have made it possible to accommodate these additional residents.

“The foundation has been a huge support for the past year or two. They’ve been developing call room space for residents as well they have helped renovate our procedure clinic on the second floor and they’ve been really supportive, hand in hand with Nova Scotia health,” said McMullin. “And they’ve also helped us find housing for the residents while they’re here. So, they’ve been immense support we couldn’t have done it without them.”

The goal of the satellite residency program is to provide a look at what life looks like in rural areas in the hopes some of today’s residents will choose to call Queens home when they begin their practice.

E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com

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