Town of Asbestos ready to change name and move beyond proud but toxic legacy
ASBESTOS, Que. — Retired miner Mario Leblanc stares at a giant map of his town from 1960 that hangs on the wall of the Asbestos, Que., historical society and laments how much his community has sacrificed to the Jeffrey Mine.
His high school, the church in which he was married and his childhood home have all been swallowed by successive expansions of the asbestos quarry where he worked, which continues to dominate the landscape and overshadows virtually everything the town does.
“I can’t go with my kids and show them where I went to school, where I was married,” he said in a recent interview. “Those places don’t exist anymore.”
Leblanc, 68, knows that if it wasn’t for the mine, Asbestos itself wouldn’t exist. But the 7,000-person community about 130 kilometres east of Montreal, has moved on from that industry after the mine closed in 2012. Now, he said, it’s time to shed the name altogether.