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New Brunswick man pleads guilty to violating province’s clean water act

FILE - The Shepody River and its surrounding Wetlands in New Brunswick. Lee Brown/The Canadian Press Images

Don’t mess with New Brunswick’s water.

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A man from Grand Falls, N.B., has pleaded guilty to performing work along the Tobique River without obtaining a permit — a violation of the province’s Clean Water Act.

Dana Marshall Gillespie, 45, plead guilty to a count of failing to obtain a watercourse alteration permit — which is required for any work undertaken within 30 metres of a watercourse or wetland — and a count of failing to comply with an order issued under the act when he appeared in Woodstock provincial court on Monday, Dec. 11, 2017.

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He’ll now pay $2,500 plus a surcharge of $750, or spend 68 days in jail, for failing to obtain a watercourse alteration permit. He was also ordered to pay $5,000 plus a surcharge of $1,500, or spend 133 days in jail, for failing to comply with an order issued under the act.

According to the New Brunswick government, a resident was canoeing along the river with his wife in July 2016 when they noticed a large portion of the bank had been excavated.

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The Department of Environment and Local Government inspected the property and ordered Gillespie to cease all work until he applied for, and received, a watercourse alteration permit.

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The 45-year-old did not comply.

As a result, the Department of Justice and Public Safety investigated and laid charges.

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Gillespie has been given until July 12 to pay his fines.

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