INVERNESS COUNTY: A pilot project this winter will allow snowmobilers to access trails and services via snow-covered road shoulders and roadways in parts of Inverness and Lunenburg counties.

“This pilot project supports safe and responsible use of snowmobiles on specific roadways at approved locations,” Public Works Minister Kim Masland said. “This will enable greater connectivity for snowmobile users and support businesses that serve outdoor enthusiasts in these communities.”

The pilot project began Dec. 15, and runs to March 31. There are three pilot areas: Margaree Centre and Big Intervale, Inverness County, and New Germany, Lunenburg County.

Access to roads and shoulders will be permitted only when areas are snow and/or ice covered, and snowmobilers will need to follow specific rules that are subject to penalties under the new Snow Vehicle Pilot Project Regulations.

The province worked with the not-for-profit Snowmobilers Association of Nova Scotia on pilot project locations.

Signs about road and shoulder access will be posted in the pilot areas, the Road Trails Act applies to all-terrain vehicles, including multipurpose off-highway utility vehicles and recreational off-highway vehicles, as well as dirt bikes.

The pilot will help determine whether snowmobiles should be added to the Road Trails Act, which has allowed other off-highway vehicles permanent road access at approved locations since late September, following a similar pilot.

Drake Lowthers

Drake Lowthers has been a community journalist for The Reporter since July, 2018. His coverage of the suspicious death of Cassidy Bernard garnered him a 2018 Atlantic Journalism Award and a 2019 Better Newspaper Competition Award; while his extensive coverage of the Lionel Desmond Fatality Inquiry received a second place finish nationally in the 2020 Canadian Community Newspaper Awards for Best Feature Series. A Nova Scotia native, who has called Antigonish home for the past decade, Lowthers has a strong passion in telling people’s stories in a creative, yet thought-provoking way. He graduated from the journalism program at Holland College in 2016, where he played varsity football with the Hurricanes. His simple pleasures in life include his two children, photography, live music and the local sports scene.

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Drake Lowthers has been a community journalist for The Reporter since July, 2018. His coverage of the suspicious death of Cassidy Bernard garnered him a 2018 Atlantic Journalism Award and a 2019 Better Newspaper Competition Award; while his extensive coverage of the Lionel Desmond Fatality Inquiry received a second place finish nationally in the 2020 Canadian Community Newspaper Awards for Best Feature Series. A Nova Scotia native, who has called Antigonish home for the past decade, Lowthers has a strong passion in telling people’s stories in a creative, yet thought-provoking way. He graduated from the journalism program at Holland College in 2016, where he played varsity football with the Hurricanes. His simple pleasures in life include his two children, photography, live music and the local sports scene.