After mill closure, anxiety mounts in N.S. rural communities dependent on forestry
ADVOCATE HARBOUR, N.S. — In a garage filled with a massive — and idle — road grader, Scott MacGillivary’s anxiety grows as he wonders what’s to become of his family following the closure of a Nova Scotia pulp mill that paid his bills.
The mothballing of the Northern Pulp factory located 200 kilometres east of his Advocate Harbour, N.S., business has already meant the layoff of his sole employee and the parking of an almost new Volvo construction machine used to clear and plow forestry roads.
“I have a family and 16-year-old boy who dreamed of working in the forestry industry. But that’s almost gone now. I really don’t know what to do now,” he said in a recent interview, his voice breaking with emotion.
The 46-year-old says that without work from Northern Pulp, his income has plummeted to one-fifth of normal levels, and he’s making daily calls to a government help line. The province set up the toll-free line after it rejected the mill’s request to continue pumping treated effluent into a lagoon behind a Mi’kmaq community, prompting the mill to stop production on Jan. 31.