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Nova Scotia paying $8.5M to fix up Bar Harbor ferry terminal

Nova Scotia taxpayers are handing out $8.5 million to renovate Bar Harbor's ferry terminal in Maine, running $3.5 million over cost estimates.

Costs were estimated at up to $5 million earlier this year in documents Bay Ferries filed in preparation for moving the CAT ferry's port from Portland, Maine, to Bar Harbor.

The money will go toward upgrading the facility — which has sat empty for a decade — fixing the dock and transferring a floating loading ramp from Portland.

In February, Nova Scotia Transportation Minister Lloyd Hines said the province would pay for "at least some of that activity," but he couldn't say how much.

The funding will come from the province's 2018-19 budget, the department said Wednesday in a news release.

The renovation work began this year before a lease agreement to use Bar Harbor's terminal was in place.

Brett Ruskin/CBC
Brett Ruskin/CBC

The work also includes demolition of some outer buildings as well as construction of spaces for the public and customs officials.

Updated security equipment will also be installed, including monitors used to screen vehicles for radioactive substances, equipment to read licence plates, as well as the installation of ticket booths and security cameras.

In January, engineering firm CES Inc., of Brewer, Maine, estimated the work would cost up to $3.75 million US.

The province is budgeting an additional $13.8 million to subsidize the operation of the ferry this year.

In the three years since Bay Ferries took over the service from Nova Star Cruises, Nova Scotia taxpayers have paid more than $37 million to subsidize operations and pay for capital upgrades.

The new ferry route will begin operating in late June.

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