NL

New search and rescue stations to boost emergency response in N.L.

Old Perlican and Twillingate will get new lifeboat stations and a site in St. Anthony will be refurbished under a funding announcement made Tuesday.

Federal government chooses Old Perlican, Twillingate as sites for rescue lifeboat centres

Old Perlican, a fishing community on the Bay de Verde Peninsula will see construction of a new rescue lifeboat station and a 19-metre search and rescue vessel. (Submitted by Theresa Earle)

Search and rescue resources in Newfoundland and Labrador got a boost Tuesday, with announcements about new lifeboat stations in Old Perlican and Twillingate and improvements to a facility in St. Anthony.

The five-year, $108-million plan will also see four new lifeboat stations in British Columbia. The new facilities are meant to improve response time to marine emergencies and will create 56 new jobs with the Canadian Coast Guard.

"It's a great boost for morale. We are doing recruitment to staff the locations," said Wade Stagg, the coast guard's project manager for lifeboat stations on the east coast.

Stagg, who was in Old Perlican for Tuesday's announcement, said construction on the rescue station there will begin this spring and the facility should be open in the summer of 2019.

Newfoundland's Bay de Verde Peninsula was chosen based on identified gaps in search and rescue response capacity, as well as an anticipated increase in vessel traffic in the area.

New building, new boat

Stagg said the station in Old Perlican will include storage room for fast-rescue craft and a new 19-metre vessel that will be capable of searching up to 120 miles offshore.

There will also be an accommodations area for crew.

"There will be two crews of four which will work two weeks on, two weeks off," Stagg said.

"So they will be on 24/7 standby and the station will be a seasonal station, operational from May, depending on ice conditions in the area, up until December."

A Canadian Coast Guard vessel off Old Perlican. Search and rescue vessels are now dispatched from St. John's when a distress signal is reported. (Rebecca Brookings)

Search and rescue vessels previously had to be dispatched from St. John's. Stagg said larger vessels will still be sent from there if a search is being done far offshore.

The federal Liberals promised during the 2015 election to boost search and rescue services in Newfoundland and Labrador, reversing a Conservative decision to close the St. John's Maritime Rescue Sub-Centre.

New lifeboat stations were part of the commitment, but locations had not been announced.

There are currently 41 lifeboat stations across the country.

With files from The Broadcast