Your neighbour might be fighting a chip factory smell, right?
Good morning from the Fundy shore — the tide's turning, and so is New Brunswick. Let's get into it.
I'll tell you what, there are some stories that just stick with you, and this one about the "sickening" smell from the Covered Bridge chip factory in Woodstock, well, it's a real New Brunswick classic. Imagine having to live with that aroma day in and day out. Folks in Woodstock are actually filing a claim against the factory, saying the smell is just too much. It's not just a passing whiff; we're talking about a persistent, "sickening" odour that's impacting their quality of life. The Town of Woodstock itself is staying tight-lipped because it's all tied up in legal proceedings, which you can understand, but it doesn't help the folks just trying to breathe clean air.
This ain't just about chips, right? This is about how industry, even a beloved local one like Covered Bridge, impacts the people living right beside it. In Saint John, we know all about industrial smells — you catch a different scent depending on which way the wind blows off the harbour, whether it's the refinery, the pulp mill, or even just the low tide on the mud flats. But there's a difference between a familiar city smell and something that's genuinely making life difficult for residents. It makes you think about the balance between supporting local business and ensuring a good quality of life for the community.
### Why This Matters for Saint John
Even though this is happening upriver in Woodstock, it resonates down here, believe you me.
* **Industrial Neighbors:** It highlights the constant negotiation between residents and industry that happens in a working port city like ours. We've got our own industrial neighbours, from the Irving Oil Refinery on the east side to the various operations along the waterfront. * **Community Voice:** It shows the power of residents coming together to demand action when something is impacting their daily lives. You gotta speak up, right? * **Legal Precedent:** Depending on how this plays out, it could set a precedent for how environmental and nuisance complaints against industrial operations are handled across the province.
It's a reminder that no matter where you are in New Brunswick, whether you're uptown Saint John catching the scent of coffee roasting or up in Woodstock smelling... well, chips, the local environment and its impact on people's lives are always front and centre.
Caleb Duguay-Firth, MiTL Sports Desk, Saint John.
The crew on the morning show are probably having a good chuckle about this one right now — catch 'em live at mornings.live.