老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料

Skip to content

Letters: Disadvantages of Sunshine Coast bridge conspicuously ignored

'Building a bridge would destroy everything that makes this place special!'
howe-sound
file photo, North Shore News

Editor: 

I am writing in response to Hal Lindhagen’s letter titled “,” particularly his final statement that the disadvantages “seem conspicuously absent.”  I would suggest they have been conspicuously ignored! 

Just off the top of my head, I can think of several disadvantages to building a bridge that would connect us to the Lower Mainland: 

- The loss of habitat and natural places for our wildlife, and us, that would occur when our population and development explodes; 

- loss of our small town culture, which is what many of us value more than convenience; 

- the strain on our infrastructure which is already stretched to the limit for a good six months of the year or more; 

- the increase in carbon emissions due to increased vehicle trips to and from the Coast because of the “convenience” of a bridge. And just a note, if our ferries are repurposed to provide more access to Vancouver Island then there would not be any reduction in ferry emissions at all. 

- the environmental impact and ecosystem disruption or destruction that would occur when building a bridge over our beautiful Salish Sea.  I do not see how this would not have a negative impact. 

I have spent almost my whole life either visiting or living here on the Sunshine Coast.  We moved here permanently 33 years ago because it was a beautiful place to raise our children where we weren’t surrounded by asphalt and concrete. Over the years, I have learned so much about the natural world and to really appreciate and value it! Building a bridge would destroy everything that makes this place special! 

Becky Wayte 

Halfmoon Bay 

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks