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La Baie

La Baie (French pronunciation: /la bɛ/, Quebec French pronunciation: /la be/) is one of three boroughs in the city of Saguenay, Quebec, Canada. It was created during Quebec's municipal reorganization in 2002. From 1976 to 2001, it was known as the Town of La Baie, a municipality composed of the Grande-Baie, Bagotville and Port-Alfred sectors.

La Baie
Borough of La Baie (in blue) in the City of Saguenay
Coordinates: 48°25′42″N 71°03′44″W / 48.42833°N 71.06222°W / 48.42833; -71.06222[1]
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
RegionSaguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean
CitySaguenay
Government
 • Borough presidentÉric Simard
Area
 • Total262.66 km2 (101.41 sq mi)
Population
 (2006)
 • Total19,639
 • Density75/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Area code(s)367/418/581
WebsiteLa Baie

It is located on the bank of the Ha! Ha! Bay (French: baie des Ha! Ha!) at the mouths of the Ha! Ha! River (French: rivière Ha! Ha!) and the Mars River (French: rivière à Mars). La Baie was the first colony built in the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region. It was founded by the Société des Vingt et un who settled the area in 1838. The depth of the banks of the Ha! Ha! Bay's waterways facilitated the rapid development of the region's largest harbour facilities after the railways were built in 1910.

The borough's main sources of socio-economic development have been the logging and the pulp and paper industries since the nineteenth and twentieth centuries respectively. Aluminum production began in the early 1980s. After the Abitibi-Consolidated paper mill, one of the main employers of the borough, shut down in 2004, Saguenay's elected officials decided to invest in La Baie's tourism industry by building and operating a port of call for cruise ships in 2008.

Bagotville Airport, the main civilian airport in Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean, is also located in La Baie. The Canadian Forces Base Bagotville, which shares the same airfield, is one of only two Canadian military bases that use the Royal Canadian Air Force's CF-18 fighters. The military base is the borough's largest employer.

While Chicoutimi and Jonquière, the two boroughs that constitute the main urban core of Saguenay, are located close to each other, La Baie is at a moderate distance from the city centre. This has created some unique issues for the borough — for example, while a full-power television or radio station in Saguenay can serve the entire city from a single transmitter without difficulty, La Baie is distant enough from the city's urban core that some low-power broadcasters, such as CKAJ-FM, have had to add separate transmitters to rebroadcast their signals in La Baie.

History edit

Exploration of Ha! Ha! Bay edit

 
A monument dedicated to the Société des vingt et un

The Saguenay's nomadic Innu tribes once inhabited La Baie. The Chicoutimians lived on the banks of the Saguenay River well before European colonization. Unlike important meeting places like Chicoutimi, Ha! Ha! Bay was far from portages to Saint-Jean Lake (French: lac St-Jean) and was not frequented by First Nations or the region's first explorers.[2]

Although it was not on eighteenth century fur trade routes,[3] Ha! Ha! Bay was used by the Hudson's Bay Company's commercial fishing boats at the mouths of the Ha! Ha! (Wissuscoué) and Mars (Vasigamenke) Rivers.[4]

In 1828, the Crown mandated land surveyor J.-B. Proulx to explore the bay area; he later reported on its hilly landscapes and logging potential.[4] Colonization was impossible during this period since the Hudson's Bay Company held exclusive rights to natural resources in the region since 1821,[5] a monopoly which would only expire in 1842. It was popular pressure from Charlevoix and especially La Malbaie that led to the tenuous beginnings of colonization in the Saguenay region. After an 1829 report[5] demonstrating the fertility levels of the region's soil, a petition asking for permission to settle the Saguenay region began to circulate in La Malbaie.[5] The government refused it and ordered further explorations of the region between 1829 and 1836, hoping to find a land link between Ha! Ha! Bay and Baie-Saint-Paul. A second petition was launched in 1835,[6] which led to the government and the Hudson's Bay Company to finally cede cutting rights to a company from La Malbaie[7] called the Société des Vingt et un.

The company's schooner sailed from La Malbaie on April 25, 1838,[8] and made several stopovers along the banks of the Saguenay. After setting up temporary camps near Tadoussac, they built their first sawmill at L'Anse St-Jean.[9] Their goal was to reach Ha! Ha! Bay to build a permanent facility.

Bagot Township and the evolution of Grande-Baie and Bagotville edit

 
The "King of Wood" William Price

The Société des vingt et un arrived in what is now the Grande-Baie sector on June 11, 1838.[9] After surveying the forest and assessing its potential, the colonists built the first lock on the Ha! Ha! River. In October of that same year, they completed the first sawmill and created the foundation of what would become Grande-Baie.[9] The first families arrived during the fall,[10] and jack pine and Eastern white pine logging operations began in 1839.[11] The hydraulic power of the two main rivers, Ha! Ha! and Mars, and the bay's tributaries was used to run several sawmills.[11] Mars Simard, a resident of Baie-Saint-Paul, opened his own sawmill on the Mars River and founded Bagotville, the bay's second settlement.[10] Colonists from Baie-Saint-Paul moved to the new outpost, while those from La Malbaie preferred Grande-Baie, which had 110 inhabitants in 1839.[12]

The Société des Vingt et un began to struggle after it lost two years worth of cutting when log-booms breached in 1840 and 1841.[11] Their main purchaser, an English wood merchant named William Price, acquired all of the company's shares in 1842. He also bought the Mars Simard sawmill in 1843,[11] making Price the owner of every sawmill in lower Saguenay.

The end of the Hudson's Bay Company's exclusive lease allowed the lawful colonization of the Saguenay region to begin.[13] The territory organized itself independently and Jean-Baptiste Duberg[14] was mandated to survey land for the new Bagot Township (named after Sir Charles Bagot)[15] and divide county seats for the new constituency.[16] Duberg was also responsible for mapping a road to Chicoutimi during the summer of 1842, which would eventually become Saint-Jean-Baptiste Boulevard and Grande-Baie Nord Boulevard.[14]

 
John Kane, the Bagot Township's first mayor

The Bagot Township was structurally unique since its population was concentrated in two areas: Bagot Village (Grande-Baie) and Bagot Town (Bagotville).[17] John Kane, a land agent originally sent by the government to collect fees for use of Crown lands, became the township's first mayor in 1850.[16] The Province of Canada created the counties of Tadoussac and Chicoutimi in 1844.[16]

The region's first school was built between the Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers to serve the bay's two population hubs.[18] The clergy began to register the population of Grande-Baie in 1842 and Bagotville in 1845.[19] On October 15, 1844, the Oblates arrived in Grande-Baie to found a mission.[20] A fire destroyed most of the township in 1846. The parishes of Saint-Alexis-de-Grande-Baie and Saint-Alphonse-de-Bagotville were canonically erected in 1857 and 1861 respectively.[21] In 1851, the population around Ha! Ha! Bay reached 2,438; they mostly depended on logging and agriculture for their livelihoods.[22]

Grande-Baie built its first post office in 1855,[23] and was proclaimed a municipality in 1860.[21] Bagotville became incorporated in 1876 and Grande-Baie followed suit in 1908.[21] Agriculture began to develop rapidly during the 1850s and focused mainly on cereal production. The blueberry harvest was also an important activity until the arrival of railways in Chambord near St-Jean Lake in 1888.[24]

An economic downturn occurred during this period and demand decreased for Saguenay timber.[24] In 1856, there were twenty-six small sawmills around the bay, in addition to the main ones on the Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers.[25] The slowdown during the 1870s led many mills to shut down or convert from pine to spruce.[24] Even though the logging industry experienced difficulties, the dairy industry flourished; by 1894, the number of cheese factories had increased to six.[26]

St-Urbain Road was opened in 1870 and connected Grande-Baie to Baie-Saint-Paul.[27] Telegraphs linked the two towns in 1880.[23] In 1859, the first jetty was built on Ha! Ha! Bay in Bagotville.[28] Three years later its first quay was built, which was later purchased by the Canadian government in 1876.[28] Bagotville's marine facilities, which were mainly used by Canada Steamship Lines, added a shipyard in 1853.[28]

Industrialization of Port-Alfred and the development from 1900 to 1976 edit

 
Businessman and politician Julien-Édouard-Alfred Dubuc

The Saguenay region experienced a new phase of economic development after the arrival of railways in Chicoutimi in 1893.[29] Journalist Joseph-Dominique Guay and banker Julien-Édouard-Alfred Dubuc founded the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi in 1898. Because its activities soon became too extensive for Chicoutimi's port facilities, the company's directors decided to build a loading port on the Ha! Ha! Bay to ship pulp.[30] The Ha! Ha! Bay railway was built in 1909 to facilitate transport to the quay in Bagotville. The first train shipment was on December 13, 1910.[31]

Some sawmills had difficulty staying afloat before the arrival of large industry. Price Sawmills, the largest on both the Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers, closed their doors in 1904 and 1912 respectively.[24] However, other sectors of the forest industry were booming. From 1902 to 1913, the Battle Island Company operated a pulp debarking factory in Anse-à-Benjamin.[25]

Several municipal infrastructure projects were built in the 1910s. Bagotville's first water system was completed in 1913. Soon macadam was used to pave the roads around Bagotville's Saint-Alphonse Church.[28] In 1915, the municipal council adopted a by-law that implemented the use of electric lights. Highway 381 was opened that same year.[32]

 
The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi's Ha! Ha! Bay Sulphite plant, Port-Alfred, 1918

Plans for a chemical pulp plant on Ha! Ha! Bay were drawn up by the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi in 1914.[30] The company's director, J.-É.-A. Dubuc, travelled to Europe to attract capital. Although he found investors in England, the volatility caused by World War I delayed investment until 1916.[30] Ha! Ha! Bay Sulphite Company Limited was founded that very year to make the chemical pulp plant a reality. Two hydroelectric power stations were built on the Ha! Ha! River to supply the plant. In 1917, the company purchased two lots from Grande-Baie totalling five square kilometres.[30] Construction of the Port-Alfred plant began on June 12, 1916, and was completed August 30, 1917. On December 4 of that same year, the Saint-Édouard Parish was founded in Port-Alfred just prior to a formal request to separate the plant's land from Grande-Baie on December 29.

The plant began operating on April 18, 1918. Four days later, the village of Port-Alfred was founded. In 1918, Bagotville organized its own police force. Industrialization, urbanization, and the construction of over fifty homes in Port-Alfred officially changed the new village's status and it became Ha! Ha! Bay's first town on September 5, 1919. Bagotville obtained the same status on January 7, 1920.

Since the beginning of the 1910s, the bay area's population had doubled to 6,600 by 1921.[33] Meanwhile, the pulp and paper industry suffered a crisis of overproduction, leading to the rapid bankruptcy of the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi and the disposal of the Ha! Ha! Bay Sulfite Company on June 30, 1922. It was succeeded by the Bay Sulfites Company Limited, which was also disposed in 1923.[34]

 
The old Port-Alfred Town Hall, which was built during the Great Depression

On July 26, 1924, the Port-Alfred Pulp and Paper Corporation acquired the plant and began converting its production from chemical to paper pulp in 1925.[34] Alcan purchased Port-Alfred's port and rail facilities in 1926 after the disposal of the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi. The docks were converted so they could load bauxite for the new aluminum smelter in Arvida.[35]

The community continued to grow despite the economic difficulties of the Canadian pulp and paper industry in 1928.[30] Canada Power and Paper Corporation acquired the Port-Alfred mill and suspended its activities on October 31, 1930.[36] In 1927, the increasing population led to the opening of new schools in Port-Alfred such as the Bagotville Boys' Academy (French: Académie des garçons de Bagotville) and the Saint-Édouard College (French: Collège Saint-Édouard).[37] The newly created Consolidated Paper Corporation bought the Port-Alfred paper mill on August 28, 1930, and reopened it on June 8, 1932.[36] The mill was closed again from 1933 to 1934, which was followed by seventy years of stability. Another forest industry company, the Scieries Saguenay, opened a plant in Bagotville in 1935.[38]

The Great Depression led to the construction of public works like the Port-Alfred and Bagotville Town Halls.[34] Many bay area residents turned to agriculture during this period of economic uncertainty.[39] Credit unions were established in Grande-Baie in 1927, Port-Alfred in 1933, and Bagotville in 1936.[37] In addition to the maritime traffic in Alcan's Port-Alfred port facilities, Bagotville's quay became Canada Steamship Lines' water terminal in the Saguenay region from 1930 to 1938.[40]

During the Second World War, the Canadian government and the Allies trained pilots and built several bases including one in Bagotville in 1942. The base was responsible for training pilots and protecting the Arvida aluminum smelter and the regions' dams until October 1944. The base was shut down in 1945.[41] In 1945, Bagotville's civilian airport was run by Canadian Pacific Air Lines.[42]

 
110th Royal Canadian Air Force Squadron, Bagotville, 1942

From 1946 onward, new services such as public transportation linked Ha! Ha! Bay communities from the Bagotville terminal. The Voice of La Baie (French: La Voix de la Baie) newspaper began publication in 1948.[43] The uneven expansion and development of the bay's three urban centres and two rural sectors led to the first municipal mergers in 1953. The Village of Grande-Baie was absorbed by Port-Alfred.[44] That same year, the new Saint-Marc-de-Bagotville Parish was established in Bagotville. Nearly a decade later, Notre-Dame-de-La-Baie Parish was founded in Port-Alfred in 1967.[41] The Ha! Ha! Bay Hospital (French: Hôpital de la baie des Ha! Ha!) opened its doors in 1970.[45]

The Cold War led to the reopening of the Bagotville military base in July 1951. Four chase squadrons were stationed there, including the 413th[46] and 414th[47] until 1953, the 440th[48] until 1957, and the 432nd[49] until 1961. Their mission was to intercept any intrusion in the Canadian northeast. In 1962, the 425th squadron was stationed in Bagotville with CF-101 Voodoo interceptors. It was responsible for protecting the 22nd NORAD.[41] In 1958, Air Canada and Québec Air began scheduling flights from Bagotville Airport.[42]

Municipal mergers in the Ha! Ha! Bay became an increasingly pressing issue and was the most important intermunicipal political debate of the 1960s.[50] Bagotville and Port-Alfred's mayors, Hervé Tremblay and Laurier Simard, strongly opposed each other on the issue.[50] It was ultimately the Quebec government that forced the merger in 1974 with the Act Concerning Certain Outaouais and Upper Saguenay Municipalities (French: Loi concernant certaines municipalités de l'Outaouais et du Haut-Saguenay). The letters patent were issued December 10, 1975, for the merger on January 1, 1976.[50]

Town of La Baie (1976–2001) edit

 
The former Town of La Baie's logo

The Town of La Baie was founded on January 1, 1976. It was the result of the merger of the Towns of Bagotville and Port-Alfred and the Parish Municipalities of Grande-Baie and Bagotville. Since the first municipal elections were only scheduled for November 1977, a temporary municipal council was appointed. The leaders of the merged municipalities sat on an administrative council; city hall alternated between the mayors of Bagotville and Port-Alfred.[50] After the 1977 elections, Laurier Simard, the former mayor of Port-Alfred, became the Town of La Baie's first mayor.

The Grande-Baie aluminum smelter was built between 1977 and 1982. Alcan spent nearly a billion dollars building the plant that opened on September 15, 1981.[51] The Saguenay Fjord National Park was created in 1983 to open the Saguenay Fjord to tourists.[52] That same year, the relocation of the Port of Chicoutimi to Grande-Anse began, moving the port from Ha! Ha! Bay to the Saguenay River. The Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal was inaugurated in October 1986.[53] The Bagotville military base put its first CF-18s in operation in December 1984.[41] These planes replaced the CF-101 Voodoos that had been used since the 1960s.

For La Baie's celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the first colony in Grande-Baie, the Théâtre du Palais municipal presented the first season of the historical extravaganza called The Amazing History of a Kingdom (French: La Fabuleuse Histoire d'un royaume). On November 25 of that same year, Quebec was hit by the Saguenay earthquake, measuring 6.25 on the Richter magnitude scale.[54]

Saguenay Flood edit

 
The Ha! Ha! Pyramid, a monument commemorating the 1996 Saguenay Flood

From July 18 to 21, 1996, a major depression resulted in 260 mm of rain falling within a fifty-hour period on the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve and the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region. The soil, which was already oversaturated after a particularly rainy month, could not absorb the excess water from the Saguenay River's drainage basins. The heavy rainfall rapidly increased the discharge from the Ha! Ha! Bay's tributaries' river basins and other Saguenay waterways. The first signs of disaster appeared on the night of July 18 to 19. Land erosion caused a house in Grande-Baie to be ripped apart and sewers located near the banks of the Ha! Ha! River began to back up. The Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers' discharges quickly became dangerous and blocked access to the bridges that crossed them. The situation was at its lowest point when a dam on Ha! Ha! Lake ruptured and washed away central Grande-Baie.

La Baie, and especially the Grande-Baie sector, was the town that was the most heavily hit by the Saguenay Flood. Fifty million dollars were required to rebuild public infrastructure and an additional thirty million were needed to stabilize the Ha! Ha! and Mars riverbanks. The railways were heavily damaged, which paralyzed the city's economy, cut off drinking water supplies, and isolated areas east of the Mars River. Transportation to lower Saguenay was impossible, leaving sectors of Port-Alfred and Grande-Baie completely isolated.[55]

Reconstruction of the Grande-Baie sector and the development of the commemorative Ha! Ha! Park began in 1997. The Ha! Ha! Pyramid was built in 1998 and officially inaugurated in 2000.[56]

Uniboard built the Panneaux MDF La Baie Inc. plant in 1997, which made medium-density fibreboard out of wood residue.[57] In 2001, rumours about the Abitibi-Consolidated mill in Port-Alfred shutting down began to surface after eighty-nine people were laid off.[58]

As 2002 approached, the Town of La Baie began opposing the Quebec government's plan for municipal mergers after the Department of Municipal Affairs published a white paper called Municipal Reorganization: Changing the Way We Do Things to Better Serve Citizens (French: La Réorganisation municipale: changer les façons de faire pour mieux server les citoyens) on April 25, 2000. Some of La Baie's elected officials expressed opposition to the imminent municipal mergers in the Saguenay region by joining Laterrière in refusing to sit on transition committees.[59] Despite this, the mergers were officialized and the November 25, 2001, municipal elections for borough representatives were held for the new city of Saguenay.

City of Saguenay and the La Baie Borough edit

 
City of Saguenay logo

La Baie was merged into the City of Saguenay on January 1, 2002.

 
Construction of the A-Lepage Quay's port of call

Despite everything that was proposed and done to keep the Abitibi-Consolidated mill open in Port-Alfred, it was temporarily shut down on December 10, 2003, as part of a major restructuring plan. It was officially closed on January 26, 2004;[60] 640 jobs were lost.[61] Having learnt from its difficult and costly experience while trying to save the Gaspésia paper mill, the Quebec government withdrew from plans to reopen the plant in 2005.[62] The mill was demolished in 2006.

Two years after the mergers, the Quebec government allowed merged municipalities to hold public consultations starting on May 16, 2004, to organize demerger referendums to be held on June 20, 2004.[63] Although La Baie was the centre of demerger support in Saguenay at the time, demerger support was not widespread enough to affect the borough's status. By the May 21, 2004, deadline, only fifty of the required 1,502 signatures were missing to hold a referendum.[64]

Since its creation in 2002, the City of Saguenay, Promotion Saguenay, and the Quebec government have worked together to increase tourism in the La Baie Borough by building port facilities for cruise ships. Originally, these groups had planned to develop Port-Alfred's Powell Quay and the Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal and set up a shuttle service. However, it was eventually Bagotville's Algélias-Lepage Quay that was selected for the installation of cruise ship facilities because of the shorter disembarkation distance and increased safety for the boat passengers.[65] After the Office of Public Hearings on the Environment (French: Bureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement) held consultations, work began in August 2007[66] despite a small opposition movement to the project in 2006.[67] The quay welcomed its first ships in September 2008.[68]

Geography edit

Territory edit

 
The urban core of the La Baie Borough
 
The southeast bank of Ha! Ha! Bay (Grande-Baie)

La Baie is located in the eastern part of the city of Saguenay. It lies between upper and lower Saguenay and surrounds Ha! Ha! Bay. The borough borders the Saguenay River to the north, Saint-Félix-d'Otis to the east, Ferland-et-Boilleau to the southeast, La Zec Mars-Moulin to the south, the Laterrière sector to the southwest, and the Chicoutimi Borough to the west.

La Baie is 262 km2 (101 sq mi) or 23% of Saguenay's total area. The urbanized zone is located on the mouths of the Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers. Urbanized areas cover only a small part of the bay area and the neighbouring plateaus.

Like the Saguenay Fjord's steep relief, altitude rises sharply from the bay's shores, particularly on the northwest banks. Overlooking the bay, the Centennial Cross (French: Croix du centenaire) is 200 m (660 ft) from the shore and is located on the des Écorceurs Cove at an altitude of 170 m (560 ft). On the other side of the bay is Mount Bélu, which has an altitude of 200 m (660 ft). The town's outskirts stretch along a fluvial terrace down the Ha! Ha! and Mars Rivers toward Chicoutimi and Laterrière and go all the way to the Laurentians. The plateaus to the east and southeast are flat enough for both agriculture and large infrastructure such as the Bagotville Airport and the Grande-Baie aluminum smelter.

The borough's soil is clayey like much of the Saguenay region because of river-ice deposits in the ravines that face the bay. There are seventy-one scars from old landslides in the La Baie Borough's urban core.[69]

Climate edit

 
Ha! Ha! Bay and the des Écorceurs Bay in the wintertime

Like most cities alongside the Saguenay River and east of St-Jean Lake, La Baie has a continental climate that is milder than the surrounding Laurentian Plateau. La Baie has an average annual temperature of 2.3 °C (36.1 °F) with temperatures varying between −44 and 36 °C (−47 and 97 °F).[70] Even though it is located on the same latitude as warmer European cities such as Paris or Vienna, La Baie has long, cold winters and short, mild summers.

The borough receives an average of 660 mm (26 in) of rain and 340 cm (130 in) of snow annually. July is the rainiest month while February is the driest. Skies are overcast 60 to 65% of the time; the borough has an average of 1,720 hours of sunshine per year.

During the winter, the average thickness of the ice on Ha! Ha! Bay is 75 cm (30 in).[71] Icebreakers keep the Saguenay River open for ships until Port-Alfred, where tides can reach up to 6 m (20 ft).

Climate data for Bagotville, Quebec (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1942–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high humidex 14.7 13.4 21.1 31.0 40.6 43.2 43.9 43.2 40.8 30.7 25.5 12.9 43.9
Record high °C (°F) 15.2
(59.4)
13.6
(56.5)
25.2
(77.4)
30.4
(86.7)
34.4
(93.9)
36.3
(97.3)
38.4
(101.1)
36.1
(97.0)
33.3
(91.9)
28.3
(82.9)
23.6
(74.5)
14.4
(57.9)
38.4
(101.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −9.7
(14.5)
−7.4
(18.7)
−0.7
(30.7)
7.4
(45.3)
16.6
(61.9)
22.3
(72.1)
24.5
(76.1)
23.4
(74.1)
18.2
(64.8)
9.9
(49.8)
2.3
(36.1)
−5.1
(22.8)
8.5
(47.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) −15.1
(4.8)
−13.1
(8.4)
−6.3
(20.7)
2.1
(35.8)
10.2
(50.4)
16.0
(60.8)
18.7
(65.7)
17.6
(63.7)
12.6
(54.7)
5.7
(42.3)
−1.5
(29.3)
−9.5
(14.9)
3.1
(37.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −20.4
(−4.7)
−18.7
(−1.7)
−11.8
(10.8)
−3.2
(26.2)
3.7
(38.7)
9.6
(49.3)
12.9
(55.2)
11.8
(53.2)
6.9
(44.4)
1.4
(34.5)
−5.4
(22.3)
−13.9
(7.0)
−2.3
(27.9)
Record low °C (°F) −40.6
(−41.1)
−43.3
(−45.9)
−33.6
(−28.5)
−24.4
(−11.9)
−10.4
(13.3)
−2.6
(27.3)
0.9
(33.6)
0.8
(33.4)
−6.7
(19.9)
−12.2
(10.0)
−25.6
(−14.1)
−39.5
(−39.1)
−43.3
(−45.9)
Record low wind chill −55.0 −54.8 −44.9 −34.3 −19.5 −7.2 1.7 −1.3 −9.6 −16.6 −32.9 −51.2 −55.0
Average precipitation mm (inches) 57.8
(2.28)
48.3
(1.90)
57.7
(2.27)
61.4
(2.42)
77.7
(3.06)
88.9
(3.50)
112.1
(4.41)
100.0
(3.94)
101.6
(4.00)
91.9
(3.62)
66.0
(2.60)
64.4
(2.54)
927.8
(36.54)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 6.5
(0.26)
5.7
(0.22)
13.8
(0.54)
39.9
(1.57)
77.6
(3.06)
88.0
(3.46)
111.8
(4.40)
91.2
(3.59)
102.6
(4.04)
77.0
(3.03)
37.8
(1.49)
11.8
(0.46)
663.7
(26.12)
Average snowfall cm (inches) 64.8
(25.5)
55.3
(21.8)
45.6
(18.0)
24.1
(9.5)
3.4
(1.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.0)
8.3
(3.3)
46.6
(18.3)
73.4
(28.9)
321.6
(126.6)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm) 19.0 15.5 15.2 14.6 15.2 14.7 16.7 16.3 15.1 17.5 18.2 20.0 198.0
Average rainy days 1.7 1.7 3.7 9.8 14.8 14.9 16.6 15.5 16.1 15.4 8.6 3.2 122.1
Average snowy days (≥ 0.2 cm) 19.1 15.4 13.1 7.2 1.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.07 3.5 13.7 19.6 92.8
Average relative humidity (%) 75.4 72.9 64.5 55.3 48.2 50.6 56.0 56.3 60.7 65.9 76.5 79.1 63.5
Source: Environment Canada[72](rain/rain days, snow/snow days, humidex, wind chill, humidity 1981–2010)[73]

Demographics edit

Around Ville de La Baie[74]
YearPop.±%
1839 110—    
1851 2,438+2116.4%
1861 3,142+28.9%
1871 2,902−7.6%
1881 3,328+14.7%
1891 3,159−5.1%
1901 2,787−11.8%
1911 3,644+30.7%
1921 6,599+81.1%
YearPop.±%
1931 8,201+24.3%
1941 10,447+27.4%
1951 13,096+25.4%
1961 18,583+41.9%
1971 19,801+6.6%
1981 20,935+5.7%
1991 20,995+0.3%
2001 19,940−5.0%
2006 19,639−1.5%
Source: 1991-2006[75]

The La Baie Borough is the fourth largest urban centre in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (after Chicoutimi, Jonquière, and Alma) with 7% of the region's total population. Over half of the region's population lived there before 1860. Upper Saguenay and Saint-Jean Lake were settled later and experienced much faster rates of population growth. The population of La Baie was soon surpassed by Chicoutimi, which eventually became the region's capital.

The La Baie Borough lost 6.5% of its population between 1991 and 2006.[75] It experienced the largest demographic decline of the city of Saguenay; the entire city lost 4.4% of its population during the same period. Even though the Abitibi-Consolidated mill closed in 2003, the population decline has slowed since 2001. The population decreased by 5.3% from 1996 to 2001 and by 1.5% from 2001 to 2006.[75] La Baie also contains the city's youngest families.[76]

It is the most sparsely populated Saguenay borough with 75 inhabitants per km2.[77] According to the 2006 census, it had 19,639 inhabitants,[75] 7,755 households,[77] and 5,635 families.[77] The most densely populated sector is Port-Alfred with 117.4 inhabitants per km2.[78]

According to Statistics Canada, 97.4% of the population is francophone and 0.7% of the population is anglophone.[77] Immigrants make up less than 1% of the population.[77]

In 2006, 9.9% of the population over the age of fifteen had a university diploma (bachelor's or higher), 38.8% had a CEGEP diploma, and 18.8% had a high school diploma. In 2001, 32.4% of the population over the age of fifteen had not completed high school, which is the highest percentage of all three of Saguenay's boroughs.[75]

The average per capita income is $24,107. The average household income is $50,119.[77] The sector with the highest per capita income is Grande-Baie at $28,319,[79] and the sector with the lowest is Port-Alfred at $21,462.[78]

"
Sociodemographic profile in 2006[77]
Indicator: La Baie Saguenay (city) Quebec
Men (%) 49.6 48.7 48.9
Women (%) 50.4 51.3 50.1
Median age 42.7 43.5 41.0
Population less than 15 years old (%) 15.9 15.2 16.6
Population 16 to 64 years (%) 69.9 69.4 69.1
Population 65 years and over (%) 14.2 15.4 14.3
Income per capita (CAD$) 24,107 23,288 24,430
Poverty rate[80] (%) 10.5 14.5 17.2

Borough edit

 
Since 2002, La Baie has been a borough of the City of Saguenay

The La Baie Borough, which was created on February 18, 2002, accounts for 3 of 19 electoral districts and 13.3% of the city's voters.[81] It is governed by a borough council that elects a president who also serves as one of three municipal councillors. The borough's director and clerk of court hold the other two municipal council seats. Council meetings are held once a month and are open to the public. They are held at the La Baie Borough Office in the Bagotville sector, which once housed La Baie's town hall.[82]

The La Baie Borough Council oversees urban planning, traffic flows, snow removal, the road system, firefighting, socioeconomic, community, and cultural development, parks, and recreation around the Ha! Ha! Bay.[82]

City of Saguenay Mayor Josée Néron
Borough President Éric Simard
Municipal Councillor District 13 Raynald Simard
Municipal Councillor District 14 Éric Simard
Municipal Councillor District 15 Martin Harvey

Administrative history edit

Administrative history of Ha! Ha! Bay communities from colonization until today edit

Mayors of La Baie since 1855 edit

Mayors of La Baie since 1855
Bagot Township (1855)
(1851-1860) John Kane
Bagot Township Parish of Grande-Baie (1860)
1859-1871 Abel Tremblay

1871-1872 Onésime Côté
1872-1873 Thomas Tremblay
1873-1875 J.-Aimé Gravel
1875-1876 Abraham Tremblay


1860-1868 John Kane

1868-1870 Frédéric Fortin
1870-1872 Louis-Joseph Forcade
1872-1878 Philibert Gagnon
1878-1881 Tite Dufour
1881-1884 Louis-Didier Tremblay
1884-1886 Johnny Savard
1886-1889 Philippe Lavoie
1889-1892 Auguste Lavoie
1892-1893 Ernest Lavoie
1893-1896 Louis Tremblay
1896-1899 Johnny Savard
1899-1903 L.-D. Tremblay
1903-1908 Pitre Grenon

Parish of Bagotville (1876) Village of Bagotville (1876)
Town of Bagotville (1920)
1876-1878 Adolphe Tremblay

1878-1880 Omer Bouchard
1880-1884 Gehu Perron
1884-1885 Didyme Bouchard
1885-1887 Pierre Paradis
1887-1889 Joseph Bluteau
1889-1892 Firmin Paradis
1892-1898 Alfred Boivin
1898-1907 Didyme Bouchard
1907-1908 Pitre Gaudreault
1908-1910 Herménégilde Girard
1910-1913 Joseph Simard
1913-1914 Xavier Villeneuve
1914-1916 Philippe Simard
1916-1917 Ben Maltais
1917-1919 Alfred Boivin
1919-1927 Xavier Bouchard
1927-1933 Philippe Simard
1933-1947 Alfred Tremblay
1947-1955 Edouard Larouche
1955-1957 Edgar Tremblay
1957-1959 Louis-Joseph Simard
1959-1962 Edgar Tremblay
1962-1965 Anatole Simard
1965-1968 Edgar Tremblay
1969-1975 Jean-Baptiste Larouche

1876-1879 J.-Aimé Gravel

1879-1880 Alfred Potvin
1880-1883 Onésime Côté
1883-1888 J.-Aimé Gravel
1888-1892 Elzéar Boivin
1892-1893 Wilfrid Lévesque
1893-1894 Wilfrid Côté
1894-1896 Agésilas Lepage
1896-1897 Pierre Chayer
1897-1899 Abel Tremblay
1899-1904 Wilfrid Côté
1904-1905 Pitre Gauthier
1905-1906 Hector Harvey
1906-1908 J.-Emile Tremblay
1908-1914 Wilfrid Lévesque
1914-1916 Stanislas Minier
1916-1917 Louis-Joseph Lévesque
1917-1922 Pierre Chayer
1922-1924 Odina Simard
1924-1932 Louis-Joseph Lévesque
1932-1933 Thomas-Louis Villeneuve
1933-1937 Georges-Henri Lavoie
1937-1939 J.-Louis Desbiens
1939-1943 Georges-Henri Lavoie
1943-1945 J.-Théo Tardif
1945-1949 Georges-Henri Lavoie
1949-1966 J.-C. Lévesque
1966-1975 Hervé Tremblay

Village of Grande-Baie (1908) Parish of Grande-Baie
ttt 1908-1914 Henry McNicoll

1914-1917 Omer Lavoie
1917-1919 Johnny Lalancette
1919-1925 Méridé Minier
1925-1927 Johnny Lalancette
1927-1935 Méridé Minier
1935-1941 Philippe-Auguste Lavoie
1941-1942 Georges Simard
1942-1945 Joseph Dufour
1945-1949 François Gagnon
1949-1951 Joseph Dufour
1951-1953 Liguori Bergeron
1953-1956 Pierre-Alphonse Tremblay
1956-1959 Adrien Simard
1959-1968 Adrien Tremblay
1968-1975 Adrien Simard

Village of Port-Alfred (1917)
Town of Port-Alfred (1919)
Village of Grande-Baie
(1917-) Adélard Grenon Port-Alfred (1953)
Town of Port-Alfred (1953)
(19..-1976) Laurier Simard
Town of La Baie (1976)
(1976-1980) Laurier Simard

(1980-1984) Claude Richard
(1984-1988) Gérard-Raymond Morin
(1988-1997) Claude Richard
(1997-2002) Réjean Simard

Borough of La Baie (2002)
(Borough presidents)
(2002-2008) Serge Simard, Jean Tremblay

(2008-2009) Jean-Eudes Simard, Jean Tremblay
(2009-2013) Jean-Eudes Simard, Jean Tremblay

(2013-2017) François Tremblay, Jean Tremblay (2017-2021) Éric Simard, Josée Néron

Residential districts and urban planning edit

 
A Port-Alfred residential neighbourhood

According to Statistics Canada, in 2006 the La Baie Borough contained 8,112 dwellings, 7,763 or 95.7% of which were principal residences while 4.3% were second residences. The percentage of dwellings built after 1986 was 22.7% or 1,840 new dwellings, which is slightly above the Saguenay average of 22.1%. Among inhabited dwellings, 6.8% need major repairs, which is 0.1% higher than the city mean. The average value of the borough's dwellings is $103,131, which is lower than the city average of $116,559.

Most residences (45.8%) were single-family dwellings. Semidetached houses represented 6.8% of residences, while 2.9% were row houses and 18.2% were duplexes. Apartment buildings with less than five stories accounted for 23.2% and those with more than five stories were 0.2%. Rental units constituted 37% of dwellings (2,870) and owned dwellings made up 63% (4,890).

Politics edit

The federal riding of Chicoutimi—Le Fjord represents the borough's 15,051 voters.[83] La Baie, which contains 20% of the riding's voters, has lost political clout to the more populous Chicoutimi Borough that shares the same Member of Parliament.[84]

Chicoutimi—Le Fjord's current MP is Richard Martel of the Conservative Party.

At the provincial level, the La Baie Borough represents 41% of voters in the Dubuc riding.[85]

The riding has been represented by the Quebec Liberal Party MNA Serge Simard since 2014.

Economics edit

Employment in the borough of La Baie (2006)[77]
Sectors of activity Number of jobs
in 2006
Quebec
Agriculture and raw materials 305 3 % 4 %
Construction 565 6 % 5 %
Manufacturing 1,370 15 % 15 %
Wholesale trade 270 3 % 4 %
Retail 1,150 13 % 12 %
Finance and real estate 195 2 % 5 %
Health and social services 1,125 12 % 11 %
Education 580 6 % 7 %
Customer service 1,015 11 % 17 %
Other services 2,510 29 % 20 %
Total 9,085

La Baie's economy used to depend on logging and wood processing, which contributed the area's expansion during the twentieth century. Since the closure of Port-Alfred's Abitibi-Consolidated mill in 2004, the borough's main economic drivers have been the Rio Tinto Alcan aluminum smelter in Grande-Baie (684 employees) and the Bagotville military base (1,200 soldiers and 250 civilians).[86] Overall, there are sixty-one businesses in thirty-four fields of activity. According to Statistics Canada, 56% or 9,085 of the borough's residents were part of the labour force in 2006. The 2006 unemployment rate was 8.5%. Workers from outside the borough come mainly from Chicoutimi, Jonquière, and the lower Saguenay region. More the half of the labour force of Saint-Félix-d'Otis and Ferland-et-Boilleau work in La Baie.[87]

Primary and secondary sectors edit

Agriculture and the dairy industry edit
 
Arable land on the plateau between Chicoutimi and La Baie

Despite the harsh terrain around Ha! Ha! Bay, the plateaus that extend toward Laterrière and Chicoutimi and overhang Grande-Baie are fertile enough to produce small quantities of cereals and oleaginous plants. Truck farming is practised in fields and in greenhouses. La Baie also contains a tree nursery and a greenhouse for grass farming. Fodder crop production is important for supporting the borough's dairy industry. Deer[88] and cattle farming are also practised.

L'écohameau de La Baie was founded in 1990 by the Groupe de recherches écologiques de la Batture (GREB). It includes an organic farm (Vallons de Chambreule) and six single-family ecological homes.[89] For a long time, it was the only certified organic farm in Saguenay. In 2000, it was the first farm in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean to offer Community-supported agriculture (community-supported agriculture) baskets.[90]

Milk production is still the main agricultural activity. The borough contains twenty-one dairy farms that are members of the Fédération des producteurs de lait du Québec. There are two major milk processing companies in the borough: La Laiterie de La Baie, which employs seventy people and accounts for 25% of the region's dairy market[91] and the Fromagerie Boivin which uses between 12 and 17 million litres of milk a year to manufacture Cheddar cheese.[92] Les bergeries du Fjord make a sheep's milk cheese.

Logging edit
 
The Port-Alfred mill, which was demolished in 2006

The logging and wood substance processing industries generated 1,172 jobs in 2002. The 2004 closure of the Abitibi-Consolidated paper mill led to the direct or indirect loss of 780 jobs, totalling 30 million dollars in lost wages.[93] The MDF La Baie plant, which was founded in 1996 and employs 120 people, had to cut eighty jobs in 2007 and 2008 because of the decreased demand for MDF panels.

Outside of large industry, La Baie's logging sector includes small- and medium-sized businesses involved in forest management and wood transportation. Some local sawmills include the Scierie Armand Tremblay & Fils and the Scierie Gauthier, which is the oldest business in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region.[94] After the Abitibi-Consolidated-owned Scierie Saguenay closed in 2005, it transferred most of its fifty employees to the Saint-Fulgence sawmill.[95] Several small businesses manufacture wood into end items such as kitchen cabinetry, furniture, roof framing, and flooring.

Quarries, non-ferrous materials, and chemicals edit

Although La Baie does not have any mines, granitic rock is extracted in Grenville Province, particularly Laurentian granite and gneiss. These quarries contain polychrome,[96] an architectural stone used in the World Financial Centre in New York, the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Centre in Washington's Federal Triangle.[97] The borough's other quarries specialize in crushed, building, and landscaping stone.

Other minor industrial activities include glass-cutting, the production of plastic and chemical derivatives (such as cleaners and industrial degreasers), PVC window frames, and asphalt.[98]

Metals edit

In 2002, aluminum production at the Rio Tinto Alcan plant in Grande-Baie combined with metal fabrication and machining generated 1,147 jobs in the borough. The Grande-Baie aluminum smelter, which opened its doors in 1980, employs 684 people and produces 196,000 tonnes of aluminum annually.[99] Nearly 40% of the plant's employees live in the borough.[100] Related industries such as aluminum fabrication, structural framing, and iron frame production[98] are also essential to La Baie's economy.

Commerce edit
 
The Galeries de La Baie shopping centre

The borough's market potential is estimated at 220 million dollars.[75] Despite the presence of the Galeries de La Baie shopping centre, which employs 185 people, and Victoria Street, the borough's main commercial artery, La Baie has the smallest area of commercial influence. Along with Dolbeau-Mistassini, La Baie's residents are the least likely in the region to shop in their own neighbourhood. Even though the borough is closer to the lower Saguenay area and is linked there by a direct road, Chicoutimi is the region's most popular shopping destination.[87]

Institutions edit
 
The 425th tactical fighter squadron badge
 
A CF-18 interceptor plane of the 425th tactical fighter squadron taking off from Bagotville

The Canadian Forces Base Bagotville is the borough's main employer. It has 1,584 permanent and temporary employees, including the 837 military families of 3 Wing.[101] It brings 100 million dollars to the area, including 65 million dollars in salaries and 11 million dollars of federal investment in La Baie and the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region.[75] The airbase's control tower is managed by Nav Canada, which also collects weather data.

Other federal institutions in the borough include a Department of Public Works and Government Services office inside the Bagotville base and a Human Resources and Skill Development office offering immigration and employment services. There is also a Community Futures Development Corporation office, an organization that focuses on community economic development.

The borough's provincial institutions include a Centre local d'emplois, a Carrefour jeunesse emploi, and a Société de l'assurance automobile du Québec branch. The Dubuc MNA's riding office is also located in the borough.

Transportation edit

Automobile edit

 
The De la Grande-Baie Nord Boulevard (Highway 372) toward downtown La Baie

A provincial highway and two interregional highways cross La Baie. The main road, Highway 170, runs from Highway 70 (which junctions with Highway 175) to Chicoutimi and Port-Alfred.[102] It becomes an interregional highway along Ha! Ha! Bay toward lower Saguenay. The other interregional highway, the Route du petit Parc (Highway 381), begins at Port-Alfred and heads toward Ferland-et-Boilleau. These interregional roads both connect the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region to Charlevoix. The only intermunicipal highway is Saint-Jean-Baptiste Boulevard, which becomes Grande-Baie Nord Boulevard (Highway 372) on the eastern edge of the borough. It connects Rivière-du-Moulin in Chicoutimi to Bagotville.

Automobile traffic in the borough passes mostly on Highway 170. The stretch between Bagotville Airport and Grande-Baie is used by 10,000 automobiles daily. Between Grande-Baie and lower Saguenay, it drops to 2,500 to 5,000 automobiles.[103] The Petit Parc (Highway 381) in direction of Ferland-et-Boilleau is used by 1,000 to 2,500 vehicles per day and the ligne Bagot (Grande-Anse Road) between Bagotville Airport and the Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal is travelled by fewer than 1,000 vehicles a day.[103] In 2000, 5% of vehicles from outside the region came from the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve (Highway 175) and 30% from lower Saguenay using Highway 170.[103] Over 1,000 heavy vehicles drive between La Baie and Chicoutimi every day using only this road.[103] Fewer than 500 heavy vehicles a day come from lower Sagenay and Ferland-de-Boilleau.[103]

 
STS Terminal in La Baie

Public transportation in the borough is provided by the City-owned Société de transport du Saguenay (STS). Two bus lines link the Chicoutimi and La Baie terminals: the Via Saint-Jean-Baptiste line that uses Highway 372 and the Via Aéroport that goes by Highway 170.[104] Three bus lines from the La Baie terminal serve the borough year-round and one during the winter. The Des Érables via Centre d'achats line travels to the Bagotville sector, the Polyvalente de La Baie via Avenue du Parc to Port-Alfred, and the Boulevard de la Grande-Baie Sud to Grande-Baie. The fourth bus line, Chemin Saint-Louis, travels along Saint-Louis Road during the wintertime.[104]

Cyclists can travel through La Baie using Route Verte 8. The bicycle path enters La Baie by De la Grande-Baie Nord Boulevard and reaches Laurier-Simard Quay, where it stretches six kilometres along Ha! Ha! Bay.

Maritime edit

The La Baie Borough has two deep-water ports:

  • The port facilities in Port-Alfred at the end of Ha! Ha! Bay; and
  • The Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal (Port of Saguenay) located outside of Ha! Ha! Bay on the Saguenay River, on the north shore of Cap-à-l'ouest.
Port-Alfred edit
Traffic in Port-Alfred (2003)[105]
Imported goods 3,800,000 t
  Bauxite 3,030,000 t
  Petroleum coke 350,000 t
  Caustic soda 190,000 t
  Fuel oil 160,000 t
  Fluorite 70,000 t
Exported goods 930,000 t
  Aluminum 930,000 t
Goods in transit 4,730,000 t

Port-Alfred is the largest port in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region and has been owned by Alcan since 1924. It is the main entryway for the natural resources the region's aluminum smelters require. In 2006, 5.5 million tonnes of raw and manufactured material passed through these installations.[105]

The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi built the first port facilities on the Ha! Ha! Bay in the early twentieth century.[106] Port-Alfred's mill and deep-water port made shipping pulp overseas much easier than Chicoutimi's port facilities, which were limited by the Saguenay River's shallow northern arm. The Port-Alfred Quay was opened in 1915. In 1924, the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi's bankruptcy forced the company to sell its transportation infrastructure including the Port-Alfred port facilities to Alcan. The port was redeveloped to be able to receive bauxite and other materials needed for aluminum production and for shipping the Port-Alfred Pulp and Paper Corporation's newsprint. Duncan Quay was completed in 1938 and Powell Quay in 1948. Since 1976, icebreakers have kept Port-Alfred's port facilities accessible year-round.[105] In 2000, Alcan entrusted the management of Powell Quay to the Saguenay Port Authority.[107]

Port Alfred's Quays:

Duncan Quay: Rio Tinto Alcan has owned Duncan Quay since its construction in 1938. This quay imports raw material and exports aluminum. It is 386 metres long, has two berths, and is 11.9 metres deep at low tide.[108] It is connected to a railway. It can accommodate ships of over 69,000 tonnes.[108]

Powell Quay: The Saguenay Port Authority has owned Powell Quay since 2000. It mainly exports finished goods and secondary processing products overseas and imports Alcan's liquid bulk. Before Abitibi-Consolidated closed in 2003, the quay also exported newsprint.[65] It is 347 metres long, has four berths, and is 10 to 10.9 metres deep at low tide.[108] A railway also passes through the quay. It can accommodate ships of over 69,000 tonnes.[108]

Between 130 and 140 ships[109] dock at Port-Alfred each year.[107] They mainly originate from bauxite-exporting countries like Brazil, Ghana, and Guinea[105] and carry bauxite, petroleum coke, sodium hydroxide, fuel oil, and fluorite. The port also exports most of the aluminum ingots produced in the region's four smelters.[105]

 
Port-Alfred's port facilities
Port of Grande-Anse edit
Traffic in the Port of Grande-Anse (2007)[110]
Imported goods 141,814 t Exported goods 98,082 t
  De-icing salt 63,371 t   Wood pulp 69,033 t
  Pitch 32,681 t   Aluminum 14,284 t
  Coal 30,391 t   Timber 13,743 t
  Boxed goods 5,717 t   Boxed goods 1,022 t
  Granite 4,956 t
  Bricks 4,698 t
Goods in transit 239,896 t

The Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal (Port of Saguenay) is the only publicly owned port in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean.[111] It is a member of the Association of Canadian Port Authorities. It originally imported hydrocarbons but it progressively began transporting forest products, general merchandise, and liquid and dry bulk.[112] In 2000, its annual total capacity increased to 600,000 tonnes.[107]

It was originally built in 1985 to offset the closure of the port in Chicoutimi and to relocate oil tanks outside of the city's downtown area. The Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal received its letters patent in 1999 from the Canadian government and became the Saguenay Port Authority (Port of Saguenay).[112]

Marcel-Dionne Quay: The quay was named after Marcel Dionne, the federal Member of Parliament for Chicoutimi—Le Fjord from 1979 to 1984. It is 286 metres long, has two berths and is 13.8 metres deep at low tide. It is open year-round and can accommodate ships of over 100,000 tonnes.[113]

Since 2004, the Grande-Anse Maritime Terminal has complied with the International Ship and Port Facility Security Code, allowing it to receive foreign ships.[112]

Rail edit

Although railways were built in Chicoutimi by 1893, locomotives did not arrive in Bagotville until 1910. The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi created an affiliate in 1909, the Compagnie de chemin de fer de la Baie des Ha! Ha!, to build a railway linking the Chicoutimi pulp mill to the quay in Bagotville. The line was originally part of the Roberval-Saguenay rail network. Alcan bought the railway in 1925 after the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi's bankruptcy the previous year. It used the railway to bring raw materials from Port-Alfred to its aluminum smelter in Arvida. The rail network expanded after the construction of new smelters in the region. Tracks were laid in the La Baie Borough to service plants in Grande-Baie and Laterrière.[114]

Every year, 87,700 full boxcars rode to or from Port-Alfred on the Roberval-Saguenay network.[105] The network employed 121 people and used eleven locomotives to transport 7,540,000 tonnes of materials annually.[105]

Air edit

 
The Bagotville military base and airport

Bagotville Airport (YBG)[115] is Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean's main civilian airport and shares its facilities with 3 Wing Bagotville. It handles 90,000 passengers a year.[116] In 2000, the civilian facilities were given to the City of Saguenay by Transport Canada; Promotion Saguenay manages the airport.[117] Flights to Montreal and other Quebec destinations take off daily. Since 2006 and 2008 respectively, Sunwing Airlines and Air Transat have offered international flights to southern destinations in the winter.[118]

Culture and society edit

Education edit

 
École Secondaire des Grandes Marées high school

La Baie's first schoolhouse opened in 1841.[119] In the 1920s, these small country schools were replaced by larger institutions in villages and towns.[120] According to authors Luc Noppen and Lucie K. Morisset, "There are still some rare examples, although not always in good shape, on the rural roads located on the town of La Baie's territory."[119]

The first Ha! Ha! Bay school boards were created in the 1860s. The Bagotville School Board (French: Commission scolaire de Bagotville) was founded in 1862,[121] followed by school boards in Grande-Baie in 1880 and Port-Alfred in 1918. These three school boards merged in 1960 and became the Ha! Ha! Bay Local School Board (French: Commission scolaire locale de la Baie-des-Ha! Ha!).[121]

La Baie has been under the jurisdiction of the Saguenay Riverside School Board (French: Commission scolaire des Rives du Saguenay) since 1998. During the 2008–2009 academic year, there were four elementary schools in the borough: the George-Vanier and Sainte-Thérèse Schools in Bagotville, the Médéric-Gravel School in Port-Alfred, and the Saint-Joseph School in Grande-Baie. There are 1,085 elementary students enrolled in these schools.[122] The only high school in the Ha! Ha! Bay area, the École Secondaire des Grandes Marées (formerly Polyvalente de La Baie), has 1,200 students.[122] The Durocher adult education centre in the Grande-Baie sector has 575 students.[122]

Vocational training is the highest level of education available within the borough. The Centre de formation professionnelle de La Baie offers its 138 students[122] training programs in metallurgy, cabinetwork, forestry, and composite materials. The closest post-secondary institutions (CEGEPs and universities) are in Chicoutimi.

The borough also has a branch of the Saguenay public library network located in the same building as the Théâtre municipal.

Religion edit

 
The Saint-Alphonse-de-Liguori Church in Bagotville

According to the Institut de la statistique du Québec, the Catholic Church had 18,865 adherents[123] in the borough in 2001, or 96% of the population. The borough is divided into two parishes: Saint-Alexis and Saint-Alphonse, which includes the Saint-Édouard, Saint-Marc, and Notre-Dame-de-la-Baie Churches. Atheists were the second largest group with 460 (2%),[123] followed by Protestants with 240 adherents (1.3%),[123] and other Christian denominations at 135 (0.6%).[123] Ha! Ha! Bay residents practising other religions make up less than 0.1% of the population. The borough has two cemeteries (Saint-Alphonse & Saint-Alexis and Saint-Édouard) managed by the Corporation des Cimetières Catholiques de La Baie.

Establishment of the Catholic Church in Ha! Ha! Bay edit

 
The Saint-Édouard Church in the Port-Alfred sector

Permanent outposts of the Catholic Church in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean were limited to a few missions near Saint-Jean Lake and at the trading post in Chicoutimi until about 1840 when the first colonists arrived in Ha! Ha! Bay. The first chapel was erected in 1842 in Grande-Baie; its first regular priest was Reverend Charles Pouliot.[124] The Catholic Church's role as a catalyst for colonization was strengthened with the arrival of the Oblates in 1844.[124] The order repaired the Grande-Baie chapel and served the Chez Mars village (Bagotville). They advocated the building of a church in the Ha! Ha! Bay area, although they only actively participated in the establishment of the Grande-Baie parish council. The Oblates left the region in 1853.[125]

Reverend Léandre Gill was sent by the Church in 1853 to continue where the Oblates left off. He was given a difficult mission: to merge all of the places of worship in Ha! Ha! Bay.[125] Gill was tasked with countering any possible influence from the Protestants who came to work for William Price's sawmills.[125] He settled in Saint-Alphose (Bagotville) and served at Saint-Alexis (Grande-Baie) twice a month.[126] The Saint-Alphose-de-Liguori Parish in Bagotville was canonically established in 1857.[127] The two parishes did not have any resident priests until 1858.[126] Grande-Baie's Saint-Alexis Parish was founded in 1861.[126]

Construction of churches edit

 
The Saint-Marc Church in the Bagotville sector

Saint-Alphose-de-Liguori is the first and oldest church in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region. It was built in Bagotville between 1860 and 1862.[128] The stone church tower was not built until 1867[129] and the interior was not completed until 1887.[130] Grande-Baie's Saint-Alexis, Ha! Ha! Bay's second church, was completed in 1868.[131] In 1902, the Marist Brothers took over the Sainte-Thérèse School in Bagotville, which was located at the northwest intersection of Victoria and De la Fabrique Streets before its current location was built in 1942.[119] The soeurs du Bon-Conseil ran the newly rebuilt Médéric-Gravel School in 1922 after the 1918 original burned down.[132] Two schools for boys were founded in 1927: the Saint-Alphose Academy (French: académie Saint-Alphose) in Bagotville[119] and the Saint-Édouard College (French: collège Saint-Joseph)[133] in Port-Alfred. They were administered by the Brothers of the Sacred Heart and the Brothers of the Christian Schools respectively.

The third church was opened in May 1930 to replace the Saint-Édouard Chapel in Port-Alfred, which was built for the canonical establishment of the new town in 1918.[134] The Saint-Édouard Church was built in a thirteenth-century English style.[135] A quarter of the construction costs were provided the London financiers that owned the Port Alfred Pulp and Paper Company.[135] The Sisters of Sainte-Marie-de-la-Présentation, who arrived from France in 1934, opened a new convent in Grande-Baie in 1940.[136] In 1948, the Brothers of the Sacred Heart built the Saint-Joseph College in Grande-Baie.[136]

The Saint-Marc Parish in Bagotville, canonically established in 1953, blessed its new church in 1956.[137] Saguenay architect Paul-Marie Côté conceptualized the building that "introduced modernism to Quebec religious architecture in a spectacular way."[138] In February 2009, the church was named a Quebec historical site by Minister Christine St-Pierre. The decision was retroactive on June 25, 2008.[139]

The fourth and final church built in the bay area was in the Notre-Dame-de-La-Baie Parish in Port-Alfred in 1962.[140] Its wooden frame won a prize in the 1965 Canadian Aesthetic Competition.[141]

Health and social services edit

 
Ha! Ha! Bay hospital

The Ha! Ha! Bay Hospital (French: Hôpital de la baie des Ha! Ha!) in the Bagotville sector is the only health and social services centre (CSSS) in the borough. It includes the St-Joseph and Bagotville long-term care centres (CHSLD). It has twenty-five short-term beds and 127 long-term beds.[142] The community clinic (CLSC), which is also in Bagotville, is known as the Centre Cléophas-Claveau.

La Baie has three medical clinics, four dental clinics, and a mental health treatment centre called Le centre de rencontre Le Phare.[143] It also has Le havre du Fjord, a drug and alcohol abuse treatment centre. The Maison de l'espoir du Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean assist youths who have family difficulties or have dropped out of school.[144]

Arts and entertainment edit

Museums edit

The borough contains two museums.

 
The musée du Fjord
Musée du Fjord edit

The Fjord Museum (French: musée du Fjord) in the Grande-Baie sector is dedicated to the Ha! Ha! Bay and Saguenay Fjord's historical, artistic, and environmental heritage. From 1967 to 1983, it was known as the Musée Monseigneur-Dufour.[145] In 1996, the Saguenay Flood caused a considerable amount of damage to the museum. It was reopened in 2004 after being renovated and expanded.[145]

The Air Defence Museum edit

The Air Defence Museum on the Bagotville military base is the only military aviation museum in Quebec.[146] It was inaugurated on June 18, 1997,[147] and is located in what was once a Protestant chapel. In the surrounding commemorative park, visitors can see an F-86 Sabre, a CF-100 Canuck, a CT-133 Silver Star, a CF-5 Freedom Fighter, a CF-101 Voodoo, a Piasecki H-21, and a Mig-23ML.[148]

Entertainment edit

The borough's auditorium, the théâtre du Palais municipal, has a capacity of 2,300 people.[149] It is the borough's largest amphitheatre and one of the most-used gathering places in Saguenay.

Since 1988, the historical extravaganza La Fabuleuse Histoire d'un royaume has been performed every summer. Music and comedy shows are also presented year-round.[150]

Sports, parks, and recreation edit

Fishing edit

Ice fishing edit

 
An ice village in L'Anse-à-Benjamin

Every winter, the ice on Ha! Ha! Bay becomes thick enough to support cabins and vehicles for ice fishing. At the height of the season, there are about 1,000 cabins[151] mainly located around Grande-Baie, Les Battures, and L'Anse-à-Benjamin.[152] Rockfish, lake smelt, ogac, Atlantic cod, and black turbot are fished there.[153]

Salmon fly-fishing edit

 
A canyon on the Mars River in the Centre plein-air Bec-Scie

The Mars River is located between Bagotville and Port-Alfred. It runs from the mouth of Ha! Ha! Bay to the edges of the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve. It is officially recognized as a salmon river by the federal government and is protected until it reaches the Bec-Scie Outdoors Centre (French: Centre plein-air Bec-Scie). It has ninety-two pools and about twenty potential spawning grounds.[154]

Until it reaches the Laurentian Park, the river is maintained by the Mars River Sport Fishing Association (French: Association des pêcheurs sportifs de la Rivière-à-Mars Inc (APSRM)). It was founded in 1983 to protect, restore, and promote the Mars River's salmon population.[155]

From 1894 to 1935, the Price Brothers Company ran a private club near the river. The construction of the Murailles Dam in 1930 and river driving until 1953 prevented the proliferation of salmon.[156] The river was reseeded in 1976.[156] It was closed to sport fishing in 1985, but was reopened again in 1992.[155] A fishway was constructed after the 1996 deluge that destroyed the original one built in 1986.[155]

Other than salmon, there are seven other fish species found in the river: brook trout, longnose dace, Northern sucker, white sucker, American eel, threespine stickleback, and northern pearl dace.[154]

Hockey edit

The Jean-Claude-Tremblay Arena hosts the annual La Baie Pee-Wee hockey tournament.[157] The arena was named after Jean-Claude Tremblay, a Bagotville native and former defenseman for the Montreal Canadiens and the Quebec Nordiques.[158]

Parks edit

Ha! Ha! River Park edit

The Ha! Ha! River Park is located at the mouth of the Ha! Ha! River in the Grande-Baie sector. It was built three years after the 1996 floods. The park is best known for its main attraction, the Ha! Ha! Pyramid, which was created by artist Jean-Jules Soucy. The Place des Ha! Ha! is located on the river's eastern bank in the old riverbed. Many cultural events are held in this municipal park.[56]

Mars Park edit

This park is located at the mouth of the Mars River along Mars Street in the Bagotville sector. It contains a six-kilometre pedestrian and bicycle path with a panoramic view of Ha! Ha! Bay.

Eucher Trail edit

Eucher (or Eusher) Trail is a walking path along the Philippe Cove and the main capes of the northern shore of Ha! Ha! Bay. The path runs at an altitude of 100 metres.[159]

Notable residents edit

Further reading edit

  • Bouchard, Russel (1996). Ville de La Baie : berceau historique du Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean (in French). Société historique du Saguenay. ISBN 2921101130.
  • Potvin, Damase (1957). La baie des Hahas: histoire, description, légendes et anecdotes (in French). Chambre de Commerce de la baie des Hahas.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Bouchard, Russel; Martin, Jean (1988). Ville de La Baie : une fenêtre sur le monde depuis 150 ans (in French). Chicoutimi: Société historique du Saguenay. ISBN 2980037362.
  • Noppen, Luc; Morisset, Lucie K. (1998). Ville de La Baie : un héritage entre nature et culture (in French). Compélec. ISBN 2980604801.
  • Savard, Michel (2004). Étude toxicologique sur la consommation de poisson de pêche blanche sur le fjord du Saguenay (PDF) (Maîtrise en ressources renouvelables thesis) (in French). Université du Québec à Chicoutimi. doi:10.1522/18227125. ISBN 1412311667.

External links edit

  • (in French) La Baie

baie, canadian, department, store, chain, colloquially, known, french, hudson, retailer, grande, baie, redirects, here, other, uses, grand, disambiguation, french, pronunciation, quebec, french, pronunciation, three, boroughs, city, saguenay, quebec, canada, c. For the Canadian department store chain colloquially known as La Baie in French see Hudson s Bay retailer Grande Baie redirects here For other uses see Grand Bay disambiguation La Baie French pronunciation la bɛ Quebec French pronunciation la be is one of three boroughs in the city of Saguenay Quebec Canada It was created during Quebec s municipal reorganization in 2002 From 1976 to 2001 it was known as the Town of La Baie a municipality composed of the Grande Baie Bagotville and Port Alfred sectors La BaieBoroughBorough of La Baie in blue in the City of SaguenayCoordinates 48 25 42 N 71 03 44 W 48 42833 N 71 06222 W 48 42833 71 06222 1 CountryCanadaProvinceQuebecRegionSaguenay Lac Saint JeanCitySaguenayGovernment Borough presidentEric SimardArea Total262 66 km2 101 41 sq mi Population 2006 Total19 639 Density75 km2 190 sq mi Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Area code s 367 418 581WebsiteLa BaieIt is located on the bank of the Ha Ha Bay French baie des Ha Ha at the mouths of the Ha Ha River French riviere Ha Ha and the Mars River French riviere a Mars La Baie was the first colony built in the Saguenay Lac St Jean region It was founded by the Societe des Vingt et un who settled the area in 1838 The depth of the banks of the Ha Ha Bay s waterways facilitated the rapid development of the region s largest harbour facilities after the railways were built in 1910 The borough s main sources of socio economic development have been the logging and the pulp and paper industries since the nineteenth and twentieth centuries respectively Aluminum production began in the early 1980s After the Abitibi Consolidated paper mill one of the main employers of the borough shut down in 2004 Saguenay s elected officials decided to invest in La Baie s tourism industry by building and operating a port of call for cruise ships in 2008 Bagotville Airport the main civilian airport in Saguenay Lac St Jean is also located in La Baie The Canadian Forces Base Bagotville which shares the same airfield is one of only two Canadian military bases that use the Royal Canadian Air Force s CF 18 fighters The military base is the borough s largest employer While Chicoutimi and Jonquiere the two boroughs that constitute the main urban core of Saguenay are located close to each other La Baie is at a moderate distance from the city centre This has created some unique issues for the borough for example while a full power television or radio station in Saguenay can serve the entire city from a single transmitter without difficulty La Baie is distant enough from the city s urban core that some low power broadcasters such as CKAJ FM have had to add separate transmitters to rebroadcast their signals in La Baie Contents 1 History 1 1 Exploration of Ha Ha Bay 1 2 Bagot Township and the evolution of Grande Baie and Bagotville 1 3 Industrialization of Port Alfred and the development from 1900 to 1976 1 4 Town of La Baie 1976 2001 1 4 1 Saguenay Flood 1 5 City of Saguenay and the La Baie Borough 2 Geography 2 1 Territory 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Borough 4 1 Administrative history 4 1 1 Administrative history of Ha Ha Bay communities from colonization until today 4 2 Mayors of La Baie since 1855 4 3 Residential districts and urban planning 4 4 Politics 4 5 Economics 4 5 1 Primary and secondary sectors 4 5 1 1 Agriculture and the dairy industry 4 5 1 2 Logging 4 5 1 3 Quarries non ferrous materials and chemicals 4 5 1 4 Metals 4 5 1 5 Commerce 4 5 1 6 Institutions 4 6 Transportation 4 6 1 Automobile 4 6 2 Maritime 4 6 2 1 Port Alfred 4 6 2 2 Port of Grande Anse 4 6 3 Rail 4 6 4 Air 5 Culture and society 5 1 Education 5 2 Religion 5 2 1 Establishment of the Catholic Church in Ha Ha Bay 5 2 2 Construction of churches 5 3 Health and social services 5 4 Arts and entertainment 5 4 1 Museums 5 4 1 1 Musee du Fjord 5 4 1 2 The Air Defence Museum 5 4 2 Entertainment 6 Sports parks and recreation 6 1 Fishing 6 1 1 Ice fishing 6 1 2 Salmon fly fishing 6 2 Hockey 6 3 Parks 6 3 1 Ha Ha River Park 6 3 2 Mars Park 6 3 3 Eucher Trail 7 Notable residents 8 Further reading 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory editExploration of Ha Ha Bay edit nbsp A monument dedicated to the Societe des vingt et unThe Saguenay s nomadic Innu tribes once inhabited La Baie The Chicoutimians lived on the banks of the Saguenay River well before European colonization Unlike important meeting places like Chicoutimi Ha Ha Bay was far from portages to Saint Jean Lake French lac St Jean and was not frequented by First Nations or the region s first explorers 2 Although it was not on eighteenth century fur trade routes 3 Ha Ha Bay was used by the Hudson s Bay Company s commercial fishing boats at the mouths of the Ha Ha Wissuscoue and Mars Vasigamenke Rivers 4 In 1828 the Crown mandated land surveyor J B Proulx to explore the bay area he later reported on its hilly landscapes and logging potential 4 Colonization was impossible during this period since the Hudson s Bay Company held exclusive rights to natural resources in the region since 1821 5 a monopoly which would only expire in 1842 It was popular pressure from Charlevoix and especially La Malbaie that led to the tenuous beginnings of colonization in the Saguenay region After an 1829 report 5 demonstrating the fertility levels of the region s soil a petition asking for permission to settle the Saguenay region began to circulate in La Malbaie 5 The government refused it and ordered further explorations of the region between 1829 and 1836 hoping to find a land link between Ha Ha Bay and Baie Saint Paul A second petition was launched in 1835 6 which led to the government and the Hudson s Bay Company to finally cede cutting rights to a company from La Malbaie 7 called the Societe des Vingt et un The company s schooner sailed from La Malbaie on April 25 1838 8 and made several stopovers along the banks of the Saguenay After setting up temporary camps near Tadoussac they built their first sawmill at L Anse St Jean 9 Their goal was to reach Ha Ha Bay to build a permanent facility Bagot Township and the evolution of Grande Baie and Bagotville edit nbsp The King of Wood William PriceThe Societe des vingt et un arrived in what is now the Grande Baie sector on June 11 1838 9 After surveying the forest and assessing its potential the colonists built the first lock on the Ha Ha River In October of that same year they completed the first sawmill and created the foundation of what would become Grande Baie 9 The first families arrived during the fall 10 and jack pine and Eastern white pine logging operations began in 1839 11 The hydraulic power of the two main rivers Ha Ha and Mars and the bay s tributaries was used to run several sawmills 11 Mars Simard a resident of Baie Saint Paul opened his own sawmill on the Mars River and founded Bagotville the bay s second settlement 10 Colonists from Baie Saint Paul moved to the new outpost while those from La Malbaie preferred Grande Baie which had 110 inhabitants in 1839 12 The Societe des Vingt et un began to struggle after it lost two years worth of cutting when log booms breached in 1840 and 1841 11 Their main purchaser an English wood merchant named William Price acquired all of the company s shares in 1842 He also bought the Mars Simard sawmill in 1843 11 making Price the owner of every sawmill in lower Saguenay The end of the Hudson s Bay Company s exclusive lease allowed the lawful colonization of the Saguenay region to begin 13 The territory organized itself independently and Jean Baptiste Duberg 14 was mandated to survey land for the new Bagot Township named after Sir Charles Bagot 15 and divide county seats for the new constituency 16 Duberg was also responsible for mapping a road to Chicoutimi during the summer of 1842 which would eventually become Saint Jean Baptiste Boulevard and Grande Baie Nord Boulevard 14 nbsp John Kane the Bagot Township s first mayorThe Bagot Township was structurally unique since its population was concentrated in two areas Bagot Village Grande Baie and Bagot Town Bagotville 17 John Kane a land agent originally sent by the government to collect fees for use of Crown lands became the township s first mayor in 1850 16 The Province of Canada created the counties of Tadoussac and Chicoutimi in 1844 16 The region s first school was built between the Ha Ha and Mars Rivers to serve the bay s two population hubs 18 The clergy began to register the population of Grande Baie in 1842 and Bagotville in 1845 19 On October 15 1844 the Oblates arrived in Grande Baie to found a mission 20 A fire destroyed most of the township in 1846 The parishes of Saint Alexis de Grande Baie and Saint Alphonse de Bagotville were canonically erected in 1857 and 1861 respectively 21 In 1851 the population around Ha Ha Bay reached 2 438 they mostly depended on logging and agriculture for their livelihoods 22 Grande Baie built its first post office in 1855 23 and was proclaimed a municipality in 1860 21 Bagotville became incorporated in 1876 and Grande Baie followed suit in 1908 21 Agriculture began to develop rapidly during the 1850s and focused mainly on cereal production The blueberry harvest was also an important activity until the arrival of railways in Chambord near St Jean Lake in 1888 24 An economic downturn occurred during this period and demand decreased for Saguenay timber 24 In 1856 there were twenty six small sawmills around the bay in addition to the main ones on the Ha Ha and Mars Rivers 25 The slowdown during the 1870s led many mills to shut down or convert from pine to spruce 24 Even though the logging industry experienced difficulties the dairy industry flourished by 1894 the number of cheese factories had increased to six 26 St Urbain Road was opened in 1870 and connected Grande Baie to Baie Saint Paul 27 Telegraphs linked the two towns in 1880 23 In 1859 the first jetty was built on Ha Ha Bay in Bagotville 28 Three years later its first quay was built which was later purchased by the Canadian government in 1876 28 Bagotville s marine facilities which were mainly used by Canada Steamship Lines added a shipyard in 1853 28 Industrialization of Port Alfred and the development from 1900 to 1976 edit Main article Bagotville Airport nbsp Businessman and politician Julien Edouard Alfred DubucThe Saguenay region experienced a new phase of economic development after the arrival of railways in Chicoutimi in 1893 29 Journalist Joseph Dominique Guay and banker Julien Edouard Alfred Dubuc founded the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi in 1898 Because its activities soon became too extensive for Chicoutimi s port facilities the company s directors decided to build a loading port on the Ha Ha Bay to ship pulp 30 The Ha Ha Bay railway was built in 1909 to facilitate transport to the quay in Bagotville The first train shipment was on December 13 1910 31 Some sawmills had difficulty staying afloat before the arrival of large industry Price Sawmills the largest on both the Ha Ha and Mars Rivers closed their doors in 1904 and 1912 respectively 24 However other sectors of the forest industry were booming From 1902 to 1913 the Battle Island Company operated a pulp debarking factory in Anse a Benjamin 25 Several municipal infrastructure projects were built in the 1910s Bagotville s first water system was completed in 1913 Soon macadam was used to pave the roads around Bagotville s Saint Alphonse Church 28 In 1915 the municipal council adopted a by law that implemented the use of electric lights Highway 381 was opened that same year 32 nbsp The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi s Ha Ha Bay Sulphite plant Port Alfred 1918Plans for a chemical pulp plant on Ha Ha Bay were drawn up by the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi in 1914 30 The company s director J E A Dubuc travelled to Europe to attract capital Although he found investors in England the volatility caused by World War I delayed investment until 1916 30 Ha Ha Bay Sulphite Company Limited was founded that very year to make the chemical pulp plant a reality Two hydroelectric power stations were built on the Ha Ha River to supply the plant In 1917 the company purchased two lots from Grande Baie totalling five square kilometres 30 Construction of the Port Alfred plant began on June 12 1916 and was completed August 30 1917 On December 4 of that same year the Saint Edouard Parish was founded in Port Alfred just prior to a formal request to separate the plant s land from Grande Baie on December 29 The plant began operating on April 18 1918 Four days later the village of Port Alfred was founded In 1918 Bagotville organized its own police force Industrialization urbanization and the construction of over fifty homes in Port Alfred officially changed the new village s status and it became Ha Ha Bay s first town on September 5 1919 Bagotville obtained the same status on January 7 1920 Since the beginning of the 1910s the bay area s population had doubled to 6 600 by 1921 33 Meanwhile the pulp and paper industry suffered a crisis of overproduction leading to the rapid bankruptcy of the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi and the disposal of the Ha Ha Bay Sulfite Company on June 30 1922 It was succeeded by the Bay Sulfites Company Limited which was also disposed in 1923 34 nbsp The old Port Alfred Town Hall which was built during the Great DepressionOn July 26 1924 the Port Alfred Pulp and Paper Corporation acquired the plant and began converting its production from chemical to paper pulp in 1925 34 Alcan purchased Port Alfred s port and rail facilities in 1926 after the disposal of the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi The docks were converted so they could load bauxite for the new aluminum smelter in Arvida 35 The community continued to grow despite the economic difficulties of the Canadian pulp and paper industry in 1928 30 Canada Power and Paper Corporation acquired the Port Alfred mill and suspended its activities on October 31 1930 36 In 1927 the increasing population led to the opening of new schools in Port Alfred such as the Bagotville Boys Academy French Academie des garcons de Bagotville and the Saint Edouard College French College Saint Edouard 37 The newly created Consolidated Paper Corporation bought the Port Alfred paper mill on August 28 1930 and reopened it on June 8 1932 36 The mill was closed again from 1933 to 1934 which was followed by seventy years of stability Another forest industry company the Scieries Saguenay opened a plant in Bagotville in 1935 38 The Great Depression led to the construction of public works like the Port Alfred and Bagotville Town Halls 34 Many bay area residents turned to agriculture during this period of economic uncertainty 39 Credit unions were established in Grande Baie in 1927 Port Alfred in 1933 and Bagotville in 1936 37 In addition to the maritime traffic in Alcan s Port Alfred port facilities Bagotville s quay became Canada Steamship Lines water terminal in the Saguenay region from 1930 to 1938 40 During the Second World War the Canadian government and the Allies trained pilots and built several bases including one in Bagotville in 1942 The base was responsible for training pilots and protecting the Arvida aluminum smelter and the regions dams until October 1944 The base was shut down in 1945 41 In 1945 Bagotville s civilian airport was run by Canadian Pacific Air Lines 42 nbsp 110th Royal Canadian Air Force Squadron Bagotville 1942From 1946 onward new services such as public transportation linked Ha Ha Bay communities from the Bagotville terminal The Voice of La Baie French La Voix de la Baie newspaper began publication in 1948 43 The uneven expansion and development of the bay s three urban centres and two rural sectors led to the first municipal mergers in 1953 The Village of Grande Baie was absorbed by Port Alfred 44 That same year the new Saint Marc de Bagotville Parish was established in Bagotville Nearly a decade later Notre Dame de La Baie Parish was founded in Port Alfred in 1967 41 The Ha Ha Bay Hospital French Hopital de la baie des Ha Ha opened its doors in 1970 45 The Cold War led to the reopening of the Bagotville military base in July 1951 Four chase squadrons were stationed there including the 413th 46 and 414th 47 until 1953 the 440th 48 until 1957 and the 432nd 49 until 1961 Their mission was to intercept any intrusion in the Canadian northeast In 1962 the 425th squadron was stationed in Bagotville with CF 101 Voodoo interceptors It was responsible for protecting the 22nd NORAD 41 In 1958 Air Canada and Quebec Air began scheduling flights from Bagotville Airport 42 Municipal mergers in the Ha Ha Bay became an increasingly pressing issue and was the most important intermunicipal political debate of the 1960s 50 Bagotville and Port Alfred s mayors Herve Tremblay and Laurier Simard strongly opposed each other on the issue 50 It was ultimately the Quebec government that forced the merger in 1974 with the Act Concerning Certain Outaouais and Upper Saguenay Municipalities French Loi concernant certaines municipalites de l Outaouais et du Haut Saguenay The letters patent were issued December 10 1975 for the merger on January 1 1976 50 Town of La Baie 1976 2001 edit nbsp The former Town of La Baie s logoThe Town of La Baie was founded on January 1 1976 It was the result of the merger of the Towns of Bagotville and Port Alfred and the Parish Municipalities of Grande Baie and Bagotville Since the first municipal elections were only scheduled for November 1977 a temporary municipal council was appointed The leaders of the merged municipalities sat on an administrative council city hall alternated between the mayors of Bagotville and Port Alfred 50 After the 1977 elections Laurier Simard the former mayor of Port Alfred became the Town of La Baie s first mayor The Grande Baie aluminum smelter was built between 1977 and 1982 Alcan spent nearly a billion dollars building the plant that opened on September 15 1981 51 The Saguenay Fjord National Park was created in 1983 to open the Saguenay Fjord to tourists 52 That same year the relocation of the Port of Chicoutimi to Grande Anse began moving the port from Ha Ha Bay to the Saguenay River The Grande Anse Maritime Terminal was inaugurated in October 1986 53 The Bagotville military base put its first CF 18s in operation in December 1984 41 These planes replaced the CF 101 Voodoos that had been used since the 1960s For La Baie s celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the first colony in Grande Baie the Theatre du Palais municipal presented the first season of the historical extravaganza called The Amazing History of a Kingdom French La Fabuleuse Histoire d un royaume On November 25 of that same year Quebec was hit by the Saguenay earthquake measuring 6 25 on the Richter magnitude scale 54 Saguenay Flood edit Main article Saguenay Flood nbsp The Ha Ha Pyramid a monument commemorating the 1996 Saguenay FloodFrom July 18 to 21 1996 a major depression resulted in 260 mm of rain falling within a fifty hour period on the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve and the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region The soil which was already oversaturated after a particularly rainy month could not absorb the excess water from the Saguenay River s drainage basins The heavy rainfall rapidly increased the discharge from the Ha Ha Bay s tributaries river basins and other Saguenay waterways The first signs of disaster appeared on the night of July 18 to 19 Land erosion caused a house in Grande Baie to be ripped apart and sewers located near the banks of the Ha Ha River began to back up The Ha Ha and Mars Rivers discharges quickly became dangerous and blocked access to the bridges that crossed them The situation was at its lowest point when a dam on Ha Ha Lake ruptured and washed away central Grande Baie La Baie and especially the Grande Baie sector was the town that was the most heavily hit by the Saguenay Flood Fifty million dollars were required to rebuild public infrastructure and an additional thirty million were needed to stabilize the Ha Ha and Mars riverbanks The railways were heavily damaged which paralyzed the city s economy cut off drinking water supplies and isolated areas east of the Mars River Transportation to lower Saguenay was impossible leaving sectors of Port Alfred and Grande Baie completely isolated 55 Reconstruction of the Grande Baie sector and the development of the commemorative Ha Ha Park began in 1997 The Ha Ha Pyramid was built in 1998 and officially inaugurated in 2000 56 Uniboard built the Panneaux MDF La Baie Inc plant in 1997 which made medium density fibreboard out of wood residue 57 In 2001 rumours about the Abitibi Consolidated mill in Port Alfred shutting down began to surface after eighty nine people were laid off 58 As 2002 approached the Town of La Baie began opposing the Quebec government s plan for municipal mergers after the Department of Municipal Affairs published a white paper called Municipal Reorganization Changing the Way We Do Things to Better Serve Citizens French La Reorganisation municipale changer les facons de faire pour mieux server les citoyens on April 25 2000 Some of La Baie s elected officials expressed opposition to the imminent municipal mergers in the Saguenay region by joining Laterriere in refusing to sit on transition committees 59 Despite this the mergers were officialized and the November 25 2001 municipal elections for borough representatives were held for the new city of Saguenay City of Saguenay and the La Baie Borough edit Main article Saguenay Quebec nbsp City of Saguenay logoLa Baie was merged into the City of Saguenay on January 1 2002 nbsp Construction of the A Lepage Quay s port of callDespite everything that was proposed and done to keep the Abitibi Consolidated mill open in Port Alfred it was temporarily shut down on December 10 2003 as part of a major restructuring plan It was officially closed on January 26 2004 60 640 jobs were lost 61 Having learnt from its difficult and costly experience while trying to save the Gaspesia paper mill the Quebec government withdrew from plans to reopen the plant in 2005 62 The mill was demolished in 2006 Two years after the mergers the Quebec government allowed merged municipalities to hold public consultations starting on May 16 2004 to organize demerger referendums to be held on June 20 2004 63 Although La Baie was the centre of demerger support in Saguenay at the time demerger support was not widespread enough to affect the borough s status By the May 21 2004 deadline only fifty of the required 1 502 signatures were missing to hold a referendum 64 Since its creation in 2002 the City of Saguenay Promotion Saguenay and the Quebec government have worked together to increase tourism in the La Baie Borough by building port facilities for cruise ships Originally these groups had planned to develop Port Alfred s Powell Quay and the Grande Anse Maritime Terminal and set up a shuttle service However it was eventually Bagotville s Algelias Lepage Quay that was selected for the installation of cruise ship facilities because of the shorter disembarkation distance and increased safety for the boat passengers 65 After the Office of Public Hearings on the Environment French Bureau d audiences publiques sur l environnement held consultations work began in August 2007 66 despite a small opposition movement to the project in 2006 67 The quay welcomed its first ships in September 2008 68 Geography editMain article Saguenay Quebec Territory edit nbsp The urban core of the La Baie Borough nbsp The southeast bank of Ha Ha Bay Grande Baie La Baie is located in the eastern part of the city of Saguenay It lies between upper and lower Saguenay and surrounds Ha Ha Bay The borough borders the Saguenay River to the north Saint Felix d Otis to the east Ferland et Boilleau to the southeast La Zec Mars Moulin to the south the Laterriere sector to the southwest and the Chicoutimi Borough to the west La Baie is 262 km2 101 sq mi or 23 of Saguenay s total area The urbanized zone is located on the mouths of the Ha Ha and Mars Rivers Urbanized areas cover only a small part of the bay area and the neighbouring plateaus Like the Saguenay Fjord s steep relief altitude rises sharply from the bay s shores particularly on the northwest banks Overlooking the bay the Centennial Cross French Croix du centenaire is 200 m 660 ft from the shore and is located on the des Ecorceurs Cove at an altitude of 170 m 560 ft On the other side of the bay is Mount Belu which has an altitude of 200 m 660 ft The town s outskirts stretch along a fluvial terrace down the Ha Ha and Mars Rivers toward Chicoutimi and Laterriere and go all the way to the Laurentians The plateaus to the east and southeast are flat enough for both agriculture and large infrastructure such as the Bagotville Airport and the Grande Baie aluminum smelter The borough s soil is clayey like much of the Saguenay region because of river ice deposits in the ravines that face the bay There are seventy one scars from old landslides in the La Baie Borough s urban core 69 Climate edit nbsp Ha Ha Bay and the des Ecorceurs Bay in the wintertimeLike most cities alongside the Saguenay River and east of St Jean Lake La Baie has a continental climate that is milder than the surrounding Laurentian Plateau La Baie has an average annual temperature of 2 3 C 36 1 F with temperatures varying between 44 and 36 C 47 and 97 F 70 Even though it is located on the same latitude as warmer European cities such as Paris or Vienna La Baie has long cold winters and short mild summers The borough receives an average of 660 mm 26 in of rain and 340 cm 130 in of snow annually July is the rainiest month while February is the driest Skies are overcast 60 to 65 of the time the borough has an average of 1 720 hours of sunshine per year During the winter the average thickness of the ice on Ha Ha Bay is 75 cm 30 in 71 Icebreakers keep the Saguenay River open for ships until Port Alfred where tides can reach up to 6 m 20 ft Climate data for Bagotville Quebec 1991 2020 normals extremes 1942 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high humidex 14 7 13 4 21 1 31 0 40 6 43 2 43 9 43 2 40 8 30 7 25 5 12 9 43 9Record high C F 15 2 59 4 13 6 56 5 25 2 77 4 30 4 86 7 34 4 93 9 36 3 97 3 38 4 101 1 36 1 97 0 33 3 91 9 28 3 82 9 23 6 74 5 14 4 57 9 38 4 101 1 Mean daily maximum C F 9 7 14 5 7 4 18 7 0 7 30 7 7 4 45 3 16 6 61 9 22 3 72 1 24 5 76 1 23 4 74 1 18 2 64 8 9 9 49 8 2 3 36 1 5 1 22 8 8 5 47 2 Daily mean C F 15 1 4 8 13 1 8 4 6 3 20 7 2 1 35 8 10 2 50 4 16 0 60 8 18 7 65 7 17 6 63 7 12 6 54 7 5 7 42 3 1 5 29 3 9 5 14 9 3 1 37 6 Mean daily minimum C F 20 4 4 7 18 7 1 7 11 8 10 8 3 2 26 2 3 7 38 7 9 6 49 3 12 9 55 2 11 8 53 2 6 9 44 4 1 4 34 5 5 4 22 3 13 9 7 0 2 3 27 9 Record low C F 40 6 41 1 43 3 45 9 33 6 28 5 24 4 11 9 10 4 13 3 2 6 27 3 0 9 33 6 0 8 33 4 6 7 19 9 12 2 10 0 25 6 14 1 39 5 39 1 43 3 45 9 Record low wind chill 55 0 54 8 44 9 34 3 19 5 7 2 1 7 1 3 9 6 16 6 32 9 51 2 55 0Average precipitation mm inches 57 8 2 28 48 3 1 90 57 7 2 27 61 4 2 42 77 7 3 06 88 9 3 50 112 1 4 41 100 0 3 94 101 6 4 00 91 9 3 62 66 0 2 60 64 4 2 54 927 8 36 54 Average rainfall mm inches 6 5 0 26 5 7 0 22 13 8 0 54 39 9 1 57 77 6 3 06 88 0 3 46 111 8 4 40 91 2 3 59 102 6 4 04 77 0 3 03 37 8 1 49 11 8 0 46 663 7 26 12 Average snowfall cm inches 64 8 25 5 55 3 21 8 45 6 18 0 24 1 9 5 3 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 8 3 3 3 46 6 18 3 73 4 28 9 321 6 126 6 Average precipitation days 0 2 mm 19 0 15 5 15 2 14 6 15 2 14 7 16 7 16 3 15 1 17 5 18 2 20 0 198 0Average rainy days 1 7 1 7 3 7 9 8 14 8 14 9 16 6 15 5 16 1 15 4 8 6 3 2 122 1Average snowy days 0 2 cm 19 1 15 4 13 1 7 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 07 3 5 13 7 19 6 92 8Average relative humidity 75 4 72 9 64 5 55 3 48 2 50 6 56 0 56 3 60 7 65 9 76 5 79 1 63 5Source Environment Canada 72 rain rain days snow snow days humidex wind chill humidity 1981 2010 73 Demographics editAround Ville de La Baie 74 YearPop 1839110 18512 438 2116 4 18613 142 28 9 18712 902 7 6 18813 328 14 7 18913 159 5 1 19012 787 11 8 19113 644 30 7 19216 599 81 1 YearPop 19318 201 24 3 194110 447 27 4 195113 096 25 4 196118 583 41 9 197119 801 6 6 198120 935 5 7 199120 995 0 3 200119 940 5 0 200619 639 1 5 Source 1991 2006 75 The La Baie Borough is the fourth largest urban centre in Saguenay Lac Saint Jean after Chicoutimi Jonquiere and Alma with 7 of the region s total population Over half of the region s population lived there before 1860 Upper Saguenay and Saint Jean Lake were settled later and experienced much faster rates of population growth The population of La Baie was soon surpassed by Chicoutimi which eventually became the region s capital The La Baie Borough lost 6 5 of its population between 1991 and 2006 75 It experienced the largest demographic decline of the city of Saguenay the entire city lost 4 4 of its population during the same period Even though the Abitibi Consolidated mill closed in 2003 the population decline has slowed since 2001 The population decreased by 5 3 from 1996 to 2001 and by 1 5 from 2001 to 2006 75 La Baie also contains the city s youngest families 76 It is the most sparsely populated Saguenay borough with 75 inhabitants per km2 77 According to the 2006 census it had 19 639 inhabitants 75 7 755 households 77 and 5 635 families 77 The most densely populated sector is Port Alfred with 117 4 inhabitants per km2 78 According to Statistics Canada 97 4 of the population is francophone and 0 7 of the population is anglophone 77 Immigrants make up less than 1 of the population 77 In 2006 9 9 of the population over the age of fifteen had a university diploma bachelor s or higher 38 8 had a CEGEP diploma and 18 8 had a high school diploma In 2001 32 4 of the population over the age of fifteen had not completed high school which is the highest percentage of all three of Saguenay s boroughs 75 The average per capita income is 24 107 The average household income is 50 119 77 The sector with the highest per capita income is Grande Baie at 28 319 79 and the sector with the lowest is Port Alfred at 21 462 78 Sociodemographic profile in 2006 77 Indicator La Baie Saguenay city QuebecMen 49 6 48 7 48 9Women 50 4 51 3 50 1Median age 42 7 43 5 41 0Population less than 15 years old 15 9 15 2 16 6Population 16 to 64 years 69 9 69 4 69 1Population 65 years and over 14 2 15 4 14 3Income per capita CAD 24 107 23 288 24 430Poverty rate 80 10 5 14 5 17 2Borough edit nbsp Since 2002 La Baie has been a borough of the City of SaguenayThe La Baie Borough which was created on February 18 2002 accounts for 3 of 19 electoral districts and 13 3 of the city s voters 81 It is governed by a borough council that elects a president who also serves as one of three municipal councillors The borough s director and clerk of court hold the other two municipal council seats Council meetings are held once a month and are open to the public They are held at the La Baie Borough Office in the Bagotville sector which once housed La Baie s town hall 82 The La Baie Borough Council oversees urban planning traffic flows snow removal the road system firefighting socioeconomic community and cultural development parks and recreation around the Ha Ha Bay 82 City of Saguenay Mayor Josee NeronBorough President Eric SimardMunicipal Councillor District 13 Raynald SimardMunicipal Councillor District 14 Eric SimardMunicipal Councillor District 15 Martin HarveyAdministrative history edit Administrative history of Ha Ha Bay communities from colonization until today edit nbsp From 1837 Colonization was divided into two major areas Grande Baie and Bagotville nbsp 1855 Bagot Township was created Grande Baie became the county town and Bagotville was given a secondary status nbsp 1860 The Saint Alexis de Grande Baie parish municipality was canonically erected the Bagot Township was governed from Bagotville nbsp 1876 Saint Alphonse de Bagotville was canonically erected Bagotville became a village nbsp 1908 Grande Baie became a village nbsp 1917 1920 The Village of Port Alfred was created within Grande Baie s territory in 1917 Port Alfred became a town in 1919 and Bagotville become one in 1920 nbsp 1953 The Town of Port Alfred absorbed the Village of Grande Baie nbsp 1976 The Towns of Port Alfred and Bagotville and the Saint Alphonse de Bagotville and Saint Alexis de Grande Baie parish municipalities merged and became the Town of La Baie nbsp 2002 The Town of La Baie became the City of Saguenay s La Baie Borough after the merger with Chicoutimi Jonquiere Laterriere Shipshaw Lac Kenogami and Canton Tremblay Mayors of La Baie since 1855 edit Mayors of La Baie since 1855Bagot Township 1855 1851 1860 John KaneBagot Township Parish of Grande Baie 1860 1859 1871 Abel Tremblay 1871 1872 Onesime Cote 1872 1873 Thomas Tremblay 1873 1875 J Aime Gravel 1875 1876 Abraham Tremblay 1860 1868 John Kane 1868 1870 Frederic Fortin 1870 1872 Louis Joseph Forcade 1872 1878 Philibert Gagnon 1878 1881 Tite Dufour 1881 1884 Louis Didier Tremblay 1884 1886 Johnny Savard 1886 1889 Philippe Lavoie 1889 1892 Auguste Lavoie 1892 1893 Ernest Lavoie 1893 1896 Louis Tremblay 1896 1899 Johnny Savard 1899 1903 L D Tremblay 1903 1908 Pitre GrenonParish of Bagotville 1876 Village of Bagotville 1876 Town of Bagotville 1920 1876 1878 Adolphe Tremblay 1878 1880 Omer Bouchard 1880 1884 Gehu Perron 1884 1885 Didyme Bouchard 1885 1887 Pierre Paradis 1887 1889 Joseph Bluteau 1889 1892 Firmin Paradis 1892 1898 Alfred Boivin 1898 1907 Didyme Bouchard 1907 1908 Pitre Gaudreault 1908 1910 Hermenegilde Girard 1910 1913 Joseph Simard 1913 1914 Xavier Villeneuve 1914 1916 Philippe Simard 1916 1917 Ben Maltais 1917 1919 Alfred Boivin 1919 1927 Xavier Bouchard 1927 1933 Philippe Simard 1933 1947 Alfred Tremblay 1947 1955 Edouard Larouche 1955 1957 Edgar Tremblay 1957 1959 Louis Joseph Simard 1959 1962 Edgar Tremblay 1962 1965 Anatole Simard 1965 1968 Edgar Tremblay 1969 1975 Jean Baptiste Larouche 1876 1879 J Aime Gravel 1879 1880 Alfred Potvin 1880 1883 Onesime Cote 1883 1888 J Aime Gravel 1888 1892 Elzear Boivin 1892 1893 Wilfrid Levesque 1893 1894 Wilfrid Cote 1894 1896 Agesilas Lepage 1896 1897 Pierre Chayer 1897 1899 Abel Tremblay 1899 1904 Wilfrid Cote 1904 1905 Pitre Gauthier 1905 1906 Hector Harvey 1906 1908 J Emile Tremblay 1908 1914 Wilfrid Levesque 1914 1916 Stanislas Minier 1916 1917 Louis Joseph Levesque 1917 1922 Pierre Chayer 1922 1924 Odina Simard 1924 1932 Louis Joseph Levesque 1932 1933 Thomas Louis Villeneuve 1933 1937 Georges Henri Lavoie 1937 1939 J Louis Desbiens 1939 1943 Georges Henri Lavoie 1943 1945 J Theo Tardif 1945 1949 Georges Henri Lavoie 1949 1966 J C Levesque 1966 1975 Herve TremblayVillage of Grande Baie 1908 Parish of Grande Baiettt 1908 1914 Henry McNicoll 1914 1917 Omer Lavoie 1917 1919 Johnny Lalancette 1919 1925 Meride Minier 1925 1927 Johnny Lalancette 1927 1935 Meride Minier 1935 1941 Philippe Auguste Lavoie 1941 1942 Georges Simard 1942 1945 Joseph Dufour 1945 1949 Francois Gagnon 1949 1951 Joseph Dufour 1951 1953 Liguori Bergeron 1953 1956 Pierre Alphonse Tremblay 1956 1959 Adrien Simard 1959 1968 Adrien Tremblay 1968 1975 Adrien SimardVillage of Port Alfred 1917 Town of Port Alfred 1919 Village of Grande Baie 1917 Adelard Grenon Port Alfred 1953 Town of Port Alfred 1953 19 1976 Laurier SimardTown of La Baie 1976 1976 1980 Laurier Simard 1980 1984 Claude Richard 1984 1988 Gerard Raymond Morin 1988 1997 Claude Richard 1997 2002 Rejean SimardBorough of La Baie 2002 Borough presidents 2002 2008 Serge Simard Jean Tremblay 2008 2009 Jean Eudes Simard Jean Tremblay 2009 2013 Jean Eudes Simard Jean Tremblay 2013 2017 Francois Tremblay Jean Tremblay 2017 2021 Eric Simard Josee NeronResidential districts and urban planning edit nbsp A Port Alfred residential neighbourhoodAccording to Statistics Canada in 2006 the La Baie Borough contained 8 112 dwellings 7 763 or 95 7 of which were principal residences while 4 3 were second residences The percentage of dwellings built after 1986 was 22 7 or 1 840 new dwellings which is slightly above the Saguenay average of 22 1 Among inhabited dwellings 6 8 need major repairs which is 0 1 higher than the city mean The average value of the borough s dwellings is 103 131 which is lower than the city average of 116 559 Most residences 45 8 were single family dwellings Semidetached houses represented 6 8 of residences while 2 9 were row houses and 18 2 were duplexes Apartment buildings with less than five stories accounted for 23 2 and those with more than five stories were 0 2 Rental units constituted 37 of dwellings 2 870 and owned dwellings made up 63 4 890 Politics edit The federal riding of Chicoutimi Le Fjord represents the borough s 15 051 voters 83 La Baie which contains 20 of the riding s voters has lost political clout to the more populous Chicoutimi Borough that shares the same Member of Parliament 84 Chicoutimi Le Fjord s current MP is Richard Martel of the Conservative Party At the provincial level the La Baie Borough represents 41 of voters in the Dubuc riding 85 The riding has been represented by the Quebec Liberal Party MNA Serge Simard since 2014 Economics edit Employment in the borough of La Baie 2006 77 Sectors of activity Number of jobsin 2006 QuebecAgriculture and raw materials 305 3 4 Construction 565 6 5 Manufacturing 1 370 15 15 Wholesale trade 270 3 4 Retail 1 150 13 12 Finance and real estate 195 2 5 Health and social services 1 125 12 11 Education 580 6 7 Customer service 1 015 11 17 Other services 2 510 29 20 Total 9 085La Baie s economy used to depend on logging and wood processing which contributed the area s expansion during the twentieth century Since the closure of Port Alfred s Abitibi Consolidated mill in 2004 the borough s main economic drivers have been the Rio Tinto Alcan aluminum smelter in Grande Baie 684 employees and the Bagotville military base 1 200 soldiers and 250 civilians 86 Overall there are sixty one businesses in thirty four fields of activity According to Statistics Canada 56 or 9 085 of the borough s residents were part of the labour force in 2006 The 2006 unemployment rate was 8 5 Workers from outside the borough come mainly from Chicoutimi Jonquiere and the lower Saguenay region More the half of the labour force of Saint Felix d Otis and Ferland et Boilleau work in La Baie 87 Primary and secondary sectors edit Agriculture and the dairy industry edit nbsp Arable land on the plateau between Chicoutimi and La BaieDespite the harsh terrain around Ha Ha Bay the plateaus that extend toward Laterriere and Chicoutimi and overhang Grande Baie are fertile enough to produce small quantities of cereals and oleaginous plants Truck farming is practised in fields and in greenhouses La Baie also contains a tree nursery and a greenhouse for grass farming Fodder crop production is important for supporting the borough s dairy industry Deer 88 and cattle farming are also practised L ecohameau de La Baie was founded in 1990 by the Groupe de recherches ecologiques de la Batture GREB It includes an organic farm Vallons de Chambreule and six single family ecological homes 89 For a long time it was the only certified organic farm in Saguenay In 2000 it was the first farm in Saguenay Lac Saint Jean to offer Community supported agriculture community supported agriculture baskets 90 Milk production is still the main agricultural activity The borough contains twenty one dairy farms that are members of the Federation des producteurs de lait du Quebec There are two major milk processing companies in the borough La Laiterie de La Baie which employs seventy people and accounts for 25 of the region s dairy market 91 and the Fromagerie Boivin which uses between 12 and 17 million litres of milk a year to manufacture Cheddar cheese 92 Les bergeries du Fjord make a sheep s milk cheese Logging edit nbsp The Port Alfred mill which was demolished in 2006The logging and wood substance processing industries generated 1 172 jobs in 2002 The 2004 closure of the Abitibi Consolidated paper mill led to the direct or indirect loss of 780 jobs totalling 30 million dollars in lost wages 93 The MDF La Baie plant which was founded in 1996 and employs 120 people had to cut eighty jobs in 2007 and 2008 because of the decreased demand for MDF panels Outside of large industry La Baie s logging sector includes small and medium sized businesses involved in forest management and wood transportation Some local sawmills include the Scierie Armand Tremblay amp Fils and the Scierie Gauthier which is the oldest business in the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region 94 After the Abitibi Consolidated owned Scierie Saguenay closed in 2005 it transferred most of its fifty employees to the Saint Fulgence sawmill 95 Several small businesses manufacture wood into end items such as kitchen cabinetry furniture roof framing and flooring Quarries non ferrous materials and chemicals edit Although La Baie does not have any mines granitic rock is extracted in Grenville Province particularly Laurentian granite and gneiss These quarries contain polychrome 96 an architectural stone used in the World Financial Centre in New York the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa Ontario Canada and the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Centre in Washington s Federal Triangle 97 The borough s other quarries specialize in crushed building and landscaping stone Other minor industrial activities include glass cutting the production of plastic and chemical derivatives such as cleaners and industrial degreasers PVC window frames and asphalt 98 Metals edit In 2002 aluminum production at the Rio Tinto Alcan plant in Grande Baie combined with metal fabrication and machining generated 1 147 jobs in the borough The Grande Baie aluminum smelter which opened its doors in 1980 employs 684 people and produces 196 000 tonnes of aluminum annually 99 Nearly 40 of the plant s employees live in the borough 100 Related industries such as aluminum fabrication structural framing and iron frame production 98 are also essential to La Baie s economy Commerce edit nbsp The Galeries de La Baie shopping centreThe borough s market potential is estimated at 220 million dollars 75 Despite the presence of the Galeries de La Baie shopping centre which employs 185 people and Victoria Street the borough s main commercial artery La Baie has the smallest area of commercial influence Along with Dolbeau Mistassini La Baie s residents are the least likely in the region to shop in their own neighbourhood Even though the borough is closer to the lower Saguenay area and is linked there by a direct road Chicoutimi is the region s most popular shopping destination 87 Institutions edit Main article Bagotville Airport nbsp The 425th tactical fighter squadron badge nbsp A CF 18 interceptor plane of the 425th tactical fighter squadron taking off from BagotvilleThe Canadian Forces Base Bagotville is the borough s main employer It has 1 584 permanent and temporary employees including the 837 military families of 3 Wing 101 It brings 100 million dollars to the area including 65 million dollars in salaries and 11 million dollars of federal investment in La Baie and the Saguenay Lac St Jean region 75 The airbase s control tower is managed by Nav Canada which also collects weather data Other federal institutions in the borough include a Department of Public Works and Government Services office inside the Bagotville base and a Human Resources and Skill Development office offering immigration and employment services There is also a Community Futures Development Corporation office an organization that focuses on community economic development The borough s provincial institutions include a Centre local d emplois a Carrefour jeunesse emploi and a Societe de l assurance automobile du Quebec branch The Dubuc MNA s riding office is also located in the borough Transportation edit Automobile edit nbsp The De la Grande Baie Nord Boulevard Highway 372 toward downtown La BaieA provincial highway and two interregional highways cross La Baie The main road Highway 170 runs from Highway 70 which junctions with Highway 175 to Chicoutimi and Port Alfred 102 It becomes an interregional highway along Ha Ha Bay toward lower Saguenay The other interregional highway the Route du petit Parc Highway 381 begins at Port Alfred and heads toward Ferland et Boilleau These interregional roads both connect the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region to Charlevoix The only intermunicipal highway is Saint Jean Baptiste Boulevard which becomes Grande Baie Nord Boulevard Highway 372 on the eastern edge of the borough It connects Riviere du Moulin in Chicoutimi to Bagotville Automobile traffic in the borough passes mostly on Highway 170 The stretch between Bagotville Airport and Grande Baie is used by 10 000 automobiles daily Between Grande Baie and lower Saguenay it drops to 2 500 to 5 000 automobiles 103 The Petit Parc Highway 381 in direction of Ferland et Boilleau is used by 1 000 to 2 500 vehicles per day and the ligne Bagot Grande Anse Road between Bagotville Airport and the Grande Anse Maritime Terminal is travelled by fewer than 1 000 vehicles a day 103 In 2000 5 of vehicles from outside the region came from the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve Highway 175 and 30 from lower Saguenay using Highway 170 103 Over 1 000 heavy vehicles drive between La Baie and Chicoutimi every day using only this road 103 Fewer than 500 heavy vehicles a day come from lower Sagenay and Ferland de Boilleau 103 nbsp STS Terminal in La BaiePublic transportation in the borough is provided by the City owned Societe de transport du Saguenay STS Two bus lines link the Chicoutimi and La Baie terminals the Via Saint Jean Baptiste line that uses Highway 372 and the Via Aeroport that goes by Highway 170 104 Three bus lines from the La Baie terminal serve the borough year round and one during the winter The Des Erables via Centre d achats line travels to the Bagotville sector the Polyvalente de La Baie via Avenue du Parc to Port Alfred and the Boulevard de la Grande Baie Sud to Grande Baie The fourth bus line Chemin Saint Louis travels along Saint Louis Road during the wintertime 104 Cyclists can travel through La Baie using Route Verte 8 The bicycle path enters La Baie by De la Grande Baie Nord Boulevard and reaches Laurier Simard Quay where it stretches six kilometres along Ha Ha Bay Maritime edit The La Baie Borough has two deep water ports The port facilities in Port Alfred at the end of Ha Ha Bay and The Grande Anse Maritime Terminal Port of Saguenay located outside of Ha Ha Bay on the Saguenay River on the north shore of Cap a l ouest Port Alfred edit Traffic in Port Alfred 2003 105 Imported goods 3 800 000 t nbsp Bauxite 3 030 000 t nbsp Petroleum coke 350 000 t nbsp Caustic soda 190 000 t nbsp Fuel oil 160 000 t nbsp Fluorite 70 000 tExported goods 930 000 t nbsp Aluminum 930 000 tGoods in transit 4 730 000 tPort Alfred is the largest port in the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region and has been owned by Alcan since 1924 It is the main entryway for the natural resources the region s aluminum smelters require In 2006 5 5 million tonnes of raw and manufactured material passed through these installations 105 The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi built the first port facilities on the Ha Ha Bay in the early twentieth century 106 Port Alfred s mill and deep water port made shipping pulp overseas much easier than Chicoutimi s port facilities which were limited by the Saguenay River s shallow northern arm The Port Alfred Quay was opened in 1915 In 1924 the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi s bankruptcy forced the company to sell its transportation infrastructure including the Port Alfred port facilities to Alcan The port was redeveloped to be able to receive bauxite and other materials needed for aluminum production and for shipping the Port Alfred Pulp and Paper Corporation s newsprint Duncan Quay was completed in 1938 and Powell Quay in 1948 Since 1976 icebreakers have kept Port Alfred s port facilities accessible year round 105 In 2000 Alcan entrusted the management of Powell Quay to the Saguenay Port Authority 107 Port Alfred s Quays Duncan Quay Rio Tinto Alcan has owned Duncan Quay since its construction in 1938 This quay imports raw material and exports aluminum It is 386 metres long has two berths and is 11 9 metres deep at low tide 108 It is connected to a railway It can accommodate ships of over 69 000 tonnes 108 Powell Quay The Saguenay Port Authority has owned Powell Quay since 2000 It mainly exports finished goods and secondary processing products overseas and imports Alcan s liquid bulk Before Abitibi Consolidated closed in 2003 the quay also exported newsprint 65 It is 347 metres long has four berths and is 10 to 10 9 metres deep at low tide 108 A railway also passes through the quay It can accommodate ships of over 69 000 tonnes 108 Between 130 and 140 ships 109 dock at Port Alfred each year 107 They mainly originate from bauxite exporting countries like Brazil Ghana and Guinea 105 and carry bauxite petroleum coke sodium hydroxide fuel oil and fluorite The port also exports most of the aluminum ingots produced in the region s four smelters 105 nbsp Port Alfred s port facilitiesPort of Grande Anse edit Traffic in the Port of Grande Anse 2007 110 Imported goods 141 814 t Exported goods 98 082 t nbsp De icing salt 63 371 t nbsp Wood pulp 69 033 t nbsp Pitch 32 681 t nbsp Aluminum 14 284 t nbsp Coal 30 391 t nbsp Timber 13 743 t nbsp Boxed goods 5 717 t nbsp Boxed goods 1 022 t nbsp Granite 4 956 t nbsp Bricks 4 698 tGoods in transit 239 896 tThe Grande Anse Maritime Terminal Port of Saguenay is the only publicly owned port in Saguenay Lac Saint Jean 111 It is a member of the Association of Canadian Port Authorities It originally imported hydrocarbons but it progressively began transporting forest products general merchandise and liquid and dry bulk 112 In 2000 its annual total capacity increased to 600 000 tonnes 107 It was originally built in 1985 to offset the closure of the port in Chicoutimi and to relocate oil tanks outside of the city s downtown area The Grande Anse Maritime Terminal received its letters patent in 1999 from the Canadian government and became the Saguenay Port Authority Port of Saguenay 112 Marcel Dionne Quay The quay was named after Marcel Dionne the federal Member of Parliament for Chicoutimi Le Fjord from 1979 to 1984 It is 286 metres long has two berths and is 13 8 metres deep at low tide It is open year round and can accommodate ships of over 100 000 tonnes 113 Since 2004 the Grande Anse Maritime Terminal has complied with the International Ship and Port Facility Security Code allowing it to receive foreign ships 112 Rail edit Although railways were built in Chicoutimi by 1893 locomotives did not arrive in Bagotville until 1910 The Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi created an affiliate in 1909 the Compagnie de chemin de fer de la Baie des Ha Ha to build a railway linking the Chicoutimi pulp mill to the quay in Bagotville The line was originally part of the Roberval Saguenay rail network Alcan bought the railway in 1925 after the Compagnie de Pulpe de Chicoutimi s bankruptcy the previous year It used the railway to bring raw materials from Port Alfred to its aluminum smelter in Arvida The rail network expanded after the construction of new smelters in the region Tracks were laid in the La Baie Borough to service plants in Grande Baie and Laterriere 114 Every year 87 700 full boxcars rode to or from Port Alfred on the Roberval Saguenay network 105 The network employed 121 people and used eleven locomotives to transport 7 540 000 tonnes of materials annually 105 Air edit Main article Bagotville Airport nbsp The Bagotville military base and airportBagotville Airport YBG 115 is Saguenay Lac Saint Jean s main civilian airport and shares its facilities with 3 Wing Bagotville It handles 90 000 passengers a year 116 In 2000 the civilian facilities were given to the City of Saguenay by Transport Canada Promotion Saguenay manages the airport 117 Flights to Montreal and other Quebec destinations take off daily Since 2006 and 2008 respectively Sunwing Airlines and Air Transat have offered international flights to southern destinations in the winter 118 Culture and society editEducation edit nbsp Ecole Secondaire des Grandes Marees high schoolLa Baie s first schoolhouse opened in 1841 119 In the 1920s these small country schools were replaced by larger institutions in villages and towns 120 According to authors Luc Noppen and Lucie K Morisset There are still some rare examples although not always in good shape on the rural roads located on the town of La Baie s territory 119 The first Ha Ha Bay school boards were created in the 1860s The Bagotville School Board French Commission scolaire de Bagotville was founded in 1862 121 followed by school boards in Grande Baie in 1880 and Port Alfred in 1918 These three school boards merged in 1960 and became the Ha Ha Bay Local School Board French Commission scolaire locale de la Baie des Ha Ha 121 La Baie has been under the jurisdiction of the Saguenay Riverside School Board French Commission scolaire des Rives du Saguenay since 1998 During the 2008 2009 academic year there were four elementary schools in the borough the George Vanier and Sainte Therese Schools in Bagotville the Mederic Gravel School in Port Alfred and the Saint Joseph School in Grande Baie There are 1 085 elementary students enrolled in these schools 122 The only high school in the Ha Ha Bay area the Ecole Secondaire des Grandes Marees formerly Polyvalente de La Baie has 1 200 students 122 The Durocher adult education centre in the Grande Baie sector has 575 students 122 Vocational training is the highest level of education available within the borough The Centre de formation professionnelle de La Baie offers its 138 students 122 training programs in metallurgy cabinetwork forestry and composite materials The closest post secondary institutions CEGEPs and universities are in Chicoutimi The borough also has a branch of the Saguenay public library network located in the same building as the Theatre municipal Religion edit nbsp The Saint Alphonse de Liguori Church in BagotvilleAccording to the Institut de la statistique du Quebec the Catholic Church had 18 865 adherents 123 in the borough in 2001 or 96 of the population The borough is divided into two parishes Saint Alexis and Saint Alphonse which includes the Saint Edouard Saint Marc and Notre Dame de la Baie Churches Atheists were the second largest group with 460 2 123 followed by Protestants with 240 adherents 1 3 123 and other Christian denominations at 135 0 6 123 Ha Ha Bay residents practising other religions make up less than 0 1 of the population The borough has two cemeteries Saint Alphonse amp Saint Alexis and Saint Edouard managed by the Corporation des Cimetieres Catholiques de La Baie Establishment of the Catholic Church in Ha Ha Bay edit nbsp The Saint Edouard Church in the Port Alfred sectorPermanent outposts of the Catholic Church in Saguenay Lac Saint Jean were limited to a few missions near Saint Jean Lake and at the trading post in Chicoutimi until about 1840 when the first colonists arrived in Ha Ha Bay The first chapel was erected in 1842 in Grande Baie its first regular priest was Reverend Charles Pouliot 124 The Catholic Church s role as a catalyst for colonization was strengthened with the arrival of the Oblates in 1844 124 The order repaired the Grande Baie chapel and served the Chez Mars village Bagotville They advocated the building of a church in the Ha Ha Bay area although they only actively participated in the establishment of the Grande Baie parish council The Oblates left the region in 1853 125 Reverend Leandre Gill was sent by the Church in 1853 to continue where the Oblates left off He was given a difficult mission to merge all of the places of worship in Ha Ha Bay 125 Gill was tasked with countering any possible influence from the Protestants who came to work for William Price s sawmills 125 He settled in Saint Alphose Bagotville and served at Saint Alexis Grande Baie twice a month 126 The Saint Alphose de Liguori Parish in Bagotville was canonically established in 1857 127 The two parishes did not have any resident priests until 1858 126 Grande Baie s Saint Alexis Parish was founded in 1861 126 Construction of churches edit nbsp The Saint Marc Church in the Bagotville sectorSaint Alphose de Liguori is the first and oldest church in the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region It was built in Bagotville between 1860 and 1862 128 The stone church tower was not built until 1867 129 and the interior was not completed until 1887 130 Grande Baie s Saint Alexis Ha Ha Bay s second church was completed in 1868 131 In 1902 the Marist Brothers took over the Sainte Therese School in Bagotville which was located at the northwest intersection of Victoria and De la Fabrique Streets before its current location was built in 1942 119 The soeurs du Bon Conseil ran the newly rebuilt Mederic Gravel School in 1922 after the 1918 original burned down 132 Two schools for boys were founded in 1927 the Saint Alphose Academy French academie Saint Alphose in Bagotville 119 and the Saint Edouard College French college Saint Joseph 133 in Port Alfred They were administered by the Brothers of the Sacred Heart and the Brothers of the Christian Schools respectively The third church was opened in May 1930 to replace the Saint Edouard Chapel in Port Alfred which was built for the canonical establishment of the new town in 1918 134 The Saint Edouard Church was built in a thirteenth century English style 135 A quarter of the construction costs were provided the London financiers that owned the Port Alfred Pulp and Paper Company 135 The Sisters of Sainte Marie de la Presentation who arrived from France in 1934 opened a new convent in Grande Baie in 1940 136 In 1948 the Brothers of the Sacred Heart built the Saint Joseph College in Grande Baie 136 The Saint Marc Parish in Bagotville canonically established in 1953 blessed its new church in 1956 137 Saguenay architect Paul Marie Cote conceptualized the building that introduced modernism to Quebec religious architecture in a spectacular way 138 In February 2009 the church was named a Quebec historical site by Minister Christine St Pierre The decision was retroactive on June 25 2008 139 The fourth and final church built in the bay area was in the Notre Dame de La Baie Parish in Port Alfred in 1962 140 Its wooden frame won a prize in the 1965 Canadian Aesthetic Competition 141 Health and social services edit nbsp Ha Ha Bay hospitalThe Ha Ha Bay Hospital French Hopital de la baie des Ha Ha in the Bagotville sector is the only health and social services centre CSSS in the borough It includes the St Joseph and Bagotville long term care centres CHSLD It has twenty five short term beds and 127 long term beds 142 The community clinic CLSC which is also in Bagotville is known as the Centre Cleophas Claveau La Baie has three medical clinics four dental clinics and a mental health treatment centre called Le centre de rencontre Le Phare 143 It also has Le havre du Fjord a drug and alcohol abuse treatment centre The Maison de l espoir du Saguenay Lac Saint Jean assist youths who have family difficulties or have dropped out of school 144 Arts and entertainment edit Museums edit The borough contains two museums nbsp The musee du FjordMusee du Fjord edit The Fjord Museum French musee du Fjord in the Grande Baie sector is dedicated to the Ha Ha Bay and Saguenay Fjord s historical artistic and environmental heritage From 1967 to 1983 it was known as the Musee Monseigneur Dufour 145 In 1996 the Saguenay Flood caused a considerable amount of damage to the museum It was reopened in 2004 after being renovated and expanded 145 The Air Defence Museum edit The Air Defence Museum on the Bagotville military base is the only military aviation museum in Quebec 146 It was inaugurated on June 18 1997 147 and is located in what was once a Protestant chapel In the surrounding commemorative park visitors can see an F 86 Sabre a CF 100 Canuck a CT 133 Silver Star a CF 5 Freedom Fighter a CF 101 Voodoo a Piasecki H 21 and a Mig 23ML 148 Entertainment edit The borough s auditorium the theatre du Palais municipal has a capacity of 2 300 people 149 It is the borough s largest amphitheatre and one of the most used gathering places in Saguenay Since 1988 the historical extravaganza La Fabuleuse Histoire d un royaume has been performed every summer Music and comedy shows are also presented year round 150 Sports parks and recreation editFishing edit Ice fishing edit nbsp An ice village in L Anse a BenjaminEvery winter the ice on Ha Ha Bay becomes thick enough to support cabins and vehicles for ice fishing At the height of the season there are about 1 000 cabins 151 mainly located around Grande Baie Les Battures and L Anse a Benjamin 152 Rockfish lake smelt ogac Atlantic cod and black turbot are fished there 153 Salmon fly fishing edit nbsp A canyon on the Mars River in the Centre plein air Bec ScieThe Mars River is located between Bagotville and Port Alfred It runs from the mouth of Ha Ha Bay to the edges of the Laurentian Wildlife Reserve It is officially recognized as a salmon river by the federal government and is protected until it reaches the Bec Scie Outdoors Centre French Centre plein air Bec Scie It has ninety two pools and about twenty potential spawning grounds 154 Until it reaches the Laurentian Park the river is maintained by the Mars River Sport Fishing Association French Association des pecheurs sportifs de la Riviere a Mars Inc APSRM It was founded in 1983 to protect restore and promote the Mars River s salmon population 155 From 1894 to 1935 the Price Brothers Company ran a private club near the river The construction of the Murailles Dam in 1930 and river driving until 1953 prevented the proliferation of salmon 156 The river was reseeded in 1976 156 It was closed to sport fishing in 1985 but was reopened again in 1992 155 A fishway was constructed after the 1996 deluge that destroyed the original one built in 1986 155 Other than salmon there are seven other fish species found in the river brook trout longnose dace Northern sucker white sucker American eel threespine stickleback and northern pearl dace 154 Hockey edit The Jean Claude Tremblay Arena hosts the annual La Baie Pee Wee hockey tournament 157 The arena was named after Jean Claude Tremblay a Bagotville native and former defenseman for the Montreal Canadiens and the Quebec Nordiques 158 Parks edit Ha Ha River Park edit The Ha Ha River Park is located at the mouth of the Ha Ha River in the Grande Baie sector It was built three years after the 1996 floods The park is best known for its main attraction the Ha Ha Pyramid which was created by artist Jean Jules Soucy The Place des Ha Ha is located on the river s eastern bank in the old riverbed Many cultural events are held in this municipal park 56 Mars Park edit This park is located at the mouth of the Mars River along Mars Street in the Bagotville sector It contains a six kilometre pedestrian and bicycle path with a panoramic view of Ha Ha Bay Eucher Trail edit Eucher or Eusher Trail is a walking path along the Philippe Cove and the main capes of the northern shore of Ha Ha Bay The path runs at an altitude of 100 metres 159 Notable residents editLouis de Gonzague Belley 1863 1930 politician Dean Bergeron 1969 Paralympic athlete Paul Edmond Gagnon 1909 1981 politician Jeannot Gilbert 1940 hockey player Ghislain Harvey 1946 politician Pierre Michaud 1936 2023 judge Gerard Raymond Morin 1940 politician Alfred Tremblay Derfla 1856 1921 journalist professor and poet Jean Claude Tremblay 1939 1994 hockey player Valerie Maltais 1990 Olympic athlete Orloge Simard 2012 musical group authors of the song 12 Pouces Further reading editBouchard Russel 1996 Ville de La Baie berceau historique du Saguenay Lac St Jean in French Societe historique du Saguenay ISBN 2921101130 Potvin Damase 1957 La baie des Hahas histoire description legendes et anecdotes in French Chambre de Commerce de la baie des Hahas References edit La Baie Geographical Names Data Base Natural Resources Canada Russel Bouchard and Normand Perron Chicoutimi la formation d une metropole regionale 1988 78 pages Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 6 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 10 a b c Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 11 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 12 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 13 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 16 a b c Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 17 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 20 a b c d Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 19 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 21 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 24 a b Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 14 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 13 a b c Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 25 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 16 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 27 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 26 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 28 a b c Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 31 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 32 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 33 a b c d Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 35 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 34 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 36 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 pp 37 38 a b c d Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 39 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 40 a b c d e Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 44 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 42 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 38 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 43 a b c Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 45 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 pp 48 49 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 46 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 47 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 pp 46 47 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 pp 52 53 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 49 a b c d Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 56 a b Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 57 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 60 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 54 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 61 413 Transport and Rescue Squadron TRS Archived 2012 08 27 at the Wayback Machine Department of National Defense 2008 Consulted 2012 01 24 414 Electronic Warfare Squadron EWS Department of National Defense 2011 Consulted 2012 01 24 440 Vampire Transport Squadron Department of National Defense 2011 Consulted 2012 01 24 432 All Weather Fighter Squadron Department of National Defense 2008 Consulted 2012 01 24 a b c d Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 55 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 59 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 65 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 p 63 Tremblement de terre au Quebec Universite de Sherbrooke Consulted 2012 01 24 The Impacts in the District of La Baie Musee du Fjord Consulted 2012 01 24 a b Les Arts et la ville Contest Presentation Ha Ha Pyramid Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine City of Saguenay Consulted 2012 01 24 Logging and Sawmilling Journal March 2002 Engineered Wood Environmental Asset Archived 2015 09 13 at the Wayback Machine Logging and Sawmilling Journal 2002 Consulted 2012 01 24 Roger Deslauriers La Baie usine de Port Alfred La tenacite des travailleurs devant Abitibi Consolidated Monde forestier Le Monde Forestier March 2004 Consulted 2008 12 16 Denis Bouchard Toujours la politique de la chaise vide a La Baie Le Quotidien August 4 2001 L experience de l usine Port Alfred Radio Canada 12 February 2008 Consulted 2012 01 24 Alain Castonguay Des fermetures d usines au Temiscamingue Encore plus de chomeurs au Saguenay Le Monde Forestier February 2004 Consulted 2008 12 16 Quebec ne veut pas faire de Port Alfred une autre Gaspesia Radio Canada 7 November 2005 Consulted 2012 01 24 Defusions ouverture des registres Radio Canada 16 May 2004 Consulted 2012 01 24 Saguenay pourra aller de l avant Radio Canada 16 May 2004 Consulted 2012 01 24 a b Promotion Saguenay Amenagement d un port d escale au quai A Lepage Etude d impact sur l environnement Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine March 2006 Consulted 2012 01 24 La firme EBC est choisie Radio Canada 17 August 2007 Consulted 2012 01 24 Le projet pourra aller de l avant Radio Canada 22 December 2006 Consulted 2012 01 24 Un premier bateau a La Baie Radio Canada 9 September 2008 Consulted 2012 01 24 La Baie Landslides Archived 2007 06 27 at the Wayback Machine Applied Sciences department Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi 1999 Consulted 2012 01 24 Etienne Troestler Le climat au Saguenay Lac Saint Jean Archived 2007 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Enclyclobec 13 November 2002 Consulted 2012 01 24 Saguenay Fjord Virtual Museum Virtual Museum of Canada 30 September 2002 Consulted 2012 01 24 Canadian Climate Normals 1991 2020 Environment and Climate Change Canada Retrieved September 26 2023 Canadian Climate Normals 1981 2010 Environment and Climate Change Canada Retrieved September 26 2023 Bouchard amp Martin 1988 a b c d e f g Portrait socio economique de SaguenayArchived 2011 02 24 at Wikiwix CLD de la Ville de Saguenay et Promotion Saguenay 2007 Consulted 2009 02 06 City of Saguenay Consultations sur le projet de politique familiale municipale a Saguenay 2007 Consulted 2008 11 13 a b c d e f g h Statistics Canada 2006 Census Combination of the 40800160 00 40800161 00 40800162 00 and 40800163 00 Census tracts of the 2006 Census or the territories of the former Town of La Baie and the La Baie Borough of the City of Saguenay a b Statistics Canada 2006 Census Census tract 40800162 00 the Port Alfred sector of the city of Saguenay Statistics Canada 2006 Census Census tract 40800163 00 which corresponds to the Grande Baie sector of Saguenay Percentage of people living below the low income cutoff Ministere des affaires municipales et des regions du Quebec Decret pour la constitution de ville de Saguenay 2000 Consulted 2012 01 24 a b City of Saguenay Municipal and Borough Councils Consulted 2012 01 24 Ville de Saguenay Vie politique municipale Les districts electoraux La BaieArchived 2011 02 24 at Wikiwix City of Saguenay 2007 Retrieved 2009 02 07 Electoral District Profile Chicoutimi Le Fjord Elections Canada Retrieved 2013 01 28 General information on the provincial electoral divisions Dubuc Le directeur general des elections du Quebec 2013 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Villes en peril Jobboom March 2006 Retrieved 2012 01 28 a b Atlas Saguenay Lac St Jean Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi 2012 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Domaine du cervide 2008 Retrieved 2013 01 28 L ecohameau de La Baie Groupe de recherches ecologiques de La Baie Retrieved 2013 01 28 Les Vallons de chambreule Groupe de recherches ecologiques de La Baie Retrieved 2013 01 28 L entreprise Archived 2008 07 03 at the Wayback Machine Les laiteries de La Baie Retrieved 2013 01 28 Melissa Bruneau La route des fromages au Saguenay Lac Saint Jean February 28 2008 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Examen conjoint du projet Eastman 1 A et la derivation Rupert Promotion Saguenay and CLD de la Ville de Saguenay May 2006 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Scierie GauthierArchived 2010 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2013 01 28 Alain Castonguay Scierie Saguenay a La Baie ferme ses portes dead link December 2005 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Polychrome Ministere des ressources naturelles 2012 Retrieved 2013 01 29 Polychrome M Granite 2010 Retrieved 2013 01 29 a b Magella J Gauthier Carl Brisson and Jean Francois Fortin L exportation au Saguenay Lac Saint Jean Portrait des etablissements manufacturiers exportateurs 1994 a 2003 Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi 2004 Retrieved 2013 01 28 Societe d electrolyse et de chimie Alcan ltee usine de Grande BaieArchived 2008 12 04 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Environment Canada Retrieved 2013 01 28 Frederic Munger Etude sur la mobilite de la main d œuvre au Saguenay rapport d analyse UQAC CLD Fjord du Saguenay 42 pages Saguenay en chiffres 1 dead link CLD de la Ville de Saguenay and Promotion Saguenay 2005 Retrieved 2008 12 24 Reseau routier national Liste des routes du RRN au 31 decembre 2006 Archived 2015 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Conseil des ministres responsables des transports et de la securite routiere 2006 Retrieved 2013 01 28 a b c d e Le transport des personnes Transport Quebec 2006 Retrieved 2013 01 29 a b Horaires et circuits Secteur La Baie Societe de transport du Saguenay 2012 Retrieved 2013 01 29 a b c d e f g 2 dead link Port Alfred Canada DNV Publications 2008 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Reamenagement des installations portuaires a Port Alfred Universite de Sherbrooke Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b c Le transport des marchandises Ministere des Transports 2002 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b c d Situation geographiqueArchived 2005 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Precicast 1998 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Between thirty and forty during the summer and nearly one hundred during the winter 2007 Annual Report Port Saguenay Saguenay Port Authority 2007 Retrieved 2013 05 08 Port of Saguenay Saguenay Port Authority 2005 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b c General Information History Saguenay Port Authority 2005 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Port Facilities Grande Anse Maritime Terminal Saguenay Port Authority 2005 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Les chemins de fer d interet local CFIL Le patrimoine ferroviaire du Quebec Retrieved 2013 02 01 Bagotville Airport YBG Details World Airport Codes 2013 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Jean Marc Tremblay Une bonne annee pour l aerogare de Bagotville usurped Le Reveil 17 May 2007 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Saguenay Bagotville Airport YBG Tourisme Quebec Retrieved 2013 02 01 Airlines Bagotville Airport 2008 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b c d Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 104 Jacques Ouellet Le developpement du systeme scolaire au Saguenay Lac Saint Jean depuis 150 ans Saguenayensia 30 1 January March 1988 Page 13 a b Historique Commission scolaire des Rives du Saguenay 2011 Retrieved 3013 02 01 a b c d Liste officielle des etablissements 2012 2013 Commission Scolaire des Rives du Saguenay 2012 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b c d Total population by major denominations Saguenay Lac Saint Jean administrative region 2001 Institut de la statistique du Quebec 11 July 2003 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 58 a b c Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 59 a b c Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 60 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 72 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 68 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 77 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 81 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 61 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 105 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 106 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 88 a b Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 92 a b Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 107 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 98 Claude Bergeron L architecture des eglises du Quebec 1940 1985 Sainte Foy Les Presses de l Universite Laval 1987 383 p Jean Marc Tremblay L eglise Saint Marc classee bien culturel Le Reveil 1 March 2009 p 25 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 100 Noppen amp Morisset 1998 p 101 Un modele d organisation integree pour le Saguenay LacSaint Jean Archive Archived 2008 11 20 at the Wayback Machine Ordre des infirmieres et infirmier auxiliaires du Quebec September 2005 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Centre Le phare Retrieved 2013 02 01 Service de documentation en etudes et interventions regionales Groupe de travail d actualisation de la strategie quebecoise d action face au suicide Secteur Domaine du Roy permanent dead link Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi 2003 Retrieved 2013 02 01 a b Musee du Fjord 45 Years Already Musee du Fjord 2012 Retrieved 2013 02 03 History Air Defence Museum 2013 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Air Defence Museum Archived 2004 02 29 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Museum of Canada 19 April 2012 Retrieved 20313 02 03 The Commemorative Park Bagotville Air Defence Museum 2013 Retrieved 2013 02 03 La salle Archive Archived 2011 09 20 at the Wayback Machine Palais municipal 2009 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Accueil Archive Archived 2011 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Palais municipal 2009 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Savard 2004 p 40 Savard 2004 p 15 Savard 2004 p 42 a b COBRAM Organisme du bassin versant du Saguenay Retrieved 2013 02 03 a b c Organisation Archive Archived 2007 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Association des Pecheurs Sportifs de la Riviere a Mars 2008 Retrieved 2013 02 03 a b General Presentation Saumon Quebec 2007 Retrieved 2012 02 03 Tournoi Pee Wee Bantam de La Baie Association du hockey mineur de La Baie Retrieved 2013 02 03 Jean Claude Tremblay hockey RDS 1 January 2004 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Federation quebecoise de la marche 2000 Repertoire des lieux de marches au Quebec De la promenade a la longue randonnee 3rd edition Saint Laurent Editions Bipede 464 p ISBN 978 2 921979 04 7 p 411 Bibliography edit Bouchard Russel Martin Jean 1988 Ville de La Baie une fenetre sur le monde depuis 150 ans in French Chicoutimi Societe historique du Saguenay ISBN 2980037362 Noppen Luc Morisset Lucie K 1998 Ville de La Baie un heritage entre nature et culture in French Compelec ISBN 2980604801 Savard Michel 2004 Etude toxicologique sur la consommation de poisson de peche blanche sur le fjord du Saguenay PDF Maitrise en ressources renouvelables thesis in French Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi doi 10 1522 18227125 ISBN 1412311667 External links edit nbsp Canada portal in French La Baie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La Baie amp oldid 1201921304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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