BRIDGE BRINGS CHANGES TO ISLAND.Byline: David Crary Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. Change is coming in a big way to this picturesque little island. One of the world's longest bridges is rising, span by spectacular span, to connect Canada's smallest province with the mainland. The eight-mile bridge is more than half completed and is expected to open on schedule in June 1997, replacing a ferry service that has linked the island to New Brunswick New Brunswick, province, Canada New Brunswick, province (2001 pop. 729,498), 28,345 sq mi (73,433 sq km), including 519 sq mi (1,345 sq km) of water surface, E Canada. since 1832. Sixty percent of island voters endorsed construction of a bridge in a 1988 referendum, and recent surveys suggest the approval rating has risen. But even among its proponents, the bridge rouses mixed emotions for those who fear the province's ``island way of life'' may never be quite the same. ``Things will become faster-paced, and it will bring a lot more industry and business,'' said Patricia Bradley, saleswoman at a Charlottetown gift shop that sells mugs bearing pictures of the bridge. ``There will be a lot more work here, maybe, but I really think there will be a lot more crime. don't want it changed. It's fine the way it is.'' By Canadian standards, Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island, province (2001 pop. 135,294), 2,184 sq mi (5,657 sq km), E Canada, off N.B. and N.S. Geography One of the Maritime Provinces, Prince Edward Island lies in the Gulf of St. is almost microscopic - roughly the size of Delaware with 135,000 residents. Charlottetown, the capital and biggest municipality, has 16,000 residents. The scenery resembles the prettiest of New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. - unspoiled seacoast, lobstermen fishing offshore, colorful farms on verdent rolling hills Rolling hills are like a mountain chain, only a "hill chain" of hills that roll on and on continually. You will often find them in between plains and mountains, near major rivers, or randomly anywhere. The only places without rolling hills are deserts and flood plains. . Stringent regulations ban billboards on most highways and limit coastal development. There is little crime, no slums. But the 14.5 percent jobless rate is the second-highest in Canada, mainly because the dominant industries - agriculture, tourism and fishing - are seasonal. Government officials hope the bridge over the Northumberland Strait Northumberland Strait, arm of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, c.200 mi (320 km) long and from 9 to 30 mi (14.5–48 km) wide, separating Prince Edward Island from New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The strait is now crossed by the Confederation Bridge. will boost the number of tourists to more than 1 million annually, up from the current 800,000, and inspire a wave of business investment as transport becomes cheaper and easier. Completion of the bridge ``will usher in Verb 1. usher in - be a precursor of; "The fall of the Berlin Wall ushered in the post-Cold War period" inaugurate, introduce commence, lead off, start, begin - set in motion, cause to start; "The U.S. an era of undreamed-of opportunities,'' said Premier Catherine Callbeck Catherine Sophia Callbeck, B.Comm. , B.Ed. (born July 25, 1939 in Central Bedeque, Prince Edward Island, Canada) was premier of Prince Edward Island from 1993 to 1996, and the first woman in Canada to lead her party to victory in a provincial election. . Tourism Minister Robert Morrissey says the projected tourist boom can be accommodated without building a lot of new hotels. He expects a proliferation of bed-and-breakfasts, and is looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. ways to stretch the island's traditional two-month vacation season into June and September. New England is a key market, he said, just an eight-hour or so drive once the ferries - and the threat of long waits to board - are gone. ``The size of the strait was viewed as something you couldn't overcome,'' Morrissey said. ``But now the bridge dwarfs everything. The strait looks like a little puddle.'' The drive over the bridge will take about 15 minutes, compared to 45 minutes on the ferry. But islanders say that comparison understates the convenience the bridge will bring - in peak summer season, backed-up motorists often wait hours to get their vehicles aboard a ferry. ``It's always a headache,'' said Peter Toombs, president of DME (Distributed Management Environment) A network monitoring and control protocol defined by the Open Software Foundation (now The Open Group). DME was not widely used. DME - Distributed Management Environment Brewing Services, a Charlottetown company that exports equipment for microbreweries. ``Some customer is always asking how come there's that extra half-day's delay. With the bridge, we become part of the mainland, literally. It will be nice and simple.'' The bridge construction project is anything but simple, though it has proceeded on schedule and within its $613 million budget. Some 2,500 workers have been involved; three have been killed on the job. The bridge consists of 44 spans, each with a main concrete girder girder In building construction, a large main supporting beam, commonly of steel or reinforced concrete, that carries a heavy transverse (crosswise) load. In a floor system, beams and joists transfer their loads to the girders, which in turn frame into the columns. 630 feet long. A towering, Dutch-built heavy-lifting vessel has been carrying the 7,500-ton girders from an on-shore construction site and hoisting them delicately atop huge piers rising from bases below the strait. The water depth is roughly 100 feet, and the highest span is 197 feet, high enough for the world's largest cruise ships to pass underneath. At the expense of a spectacular view, the two-lane bridge will have solid side walls to help keep drivers from being unnerved by the height. The bridge is being curved to minimize the potentially hypnotic effect of a long straightaway straight·a·way adj. 1. Extending in a straight line or course without a curve or turn. 2. Unhesitating; immediate: a straightaway denial. n. . Tolls will be equivalent to what the ferry crossing costs - about $22 U.S. roundtrip for a car. CAPTION(S): Photo PHOTO The 1880s Green Gables House and other attractions on Prince Edward Island may lose some of their unspoiled air when a new bridge links the island with the Canadian mainland, residents fear. Susanne Hopkins/Daily News |
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