Nova Scotia

Province awards $2.9M contract to build long-awaited Shelburne clinic

The province has awarded a contract for the construction of a medical clinic that many residents in Shelburne, N.S., have been awaiting for years.

Warden Penny Smith says decision is 10 years in the making

Once complete, the new medical clinic in Shelburne, N.S., will be staffed by four doctors, three nurse practitioners and a family practice nurse. (Goodluz/Shutterstock)

Residents in Shelburne, N.S., are a step closer to getting a long-awaited medical clinic now that the province has awarded a Lunenburg company with a contract worth $2.88 million to build the facility.

"It's been approximately, I believe, 10 years since we started this," said Penny Smith, warden of the Municipality of the District of Shelburne.

"So to see it come to this point of actually awarding the tender and knowing that this clinic is going to be built and hopefully servicing our residents by next year is pretty exciting."

The municipality said the province awarded the contract to Rikjak Construction Ltd. on July 14.

The province closed a medical centre next to the Roseway hospital in the town more than seven years ago so it could undergo renovations. That work was never done, and residents had been fighting for the clinic to expand and reopen.

Instead, the new facility will go up at the same site. Smith said work is expected to get underway in August.

Construction to begin later than promised

The office of Premier Stephen McNeil released a statement in late April, days before he called a provincial election, saying the tender for the new clinic would go out April 24 and construction was expected to begin in June.

A spokesperson for the province said earlier this month that the tender went out on time and closed on June 1.

Brian Taylor said the review period for awarding a tender can vary depending on how complex a project is, and that the Shelburne clinic was still expected to be completed in the fall of 2018.

The municipality said it's kicking in $450,000 for the new facility.

The clinic will be staffed by four doctors, three nurse practitioners and a family practice nurse, the premier's office said in April. Those eight health-care providers will work together at the Roseway Hospital until the new clinic opens.

With files from Anjuli Patil