Zoning by-law infraction may lead to evictions in Sackville

131 Main Street in Sackville is the subject of a court proceeding over a bylaw infraction that may see tenants evicted this month. Image: Google Streetview, September 2018

Fifteen people in Sackville, most if not all of them students, might be out of a place to live come the end of the month.

Tenants of 131 Main Street starting reaching out in search of new apartments on Tuesday, saying they were informed by their landlord’s lawyer that they would need to vacate their building by January 31st.

Town of Sackville CAO Jamie Burke says that a hearing regarding a by-law infraction on the property took place last Friday in a Moncton court.

That hearing was adjourned and will continue this Friday.

The owner of the building, Gordon Beal, said the matter is still unresolved and didn’t comment further.

131 Main Street is a Sackville historic landmark, known as Allison House, Fisher House or Fawcett house, among other names. It was first built in 1841, with a major addition built in 1997.

Up until recently, the building was occupied by commercial tenants.

In 2014, Beal applied for zoning changes to build an apartment building behind Allison House, on the same property. After passing first and second reading, Sackville town council rejected the zoning changes required to build the apartment building.

The property is zoned Residential Historic Commercial, and allows for a number of uses including boarding houses, restaurants, professional offices and funeral homes, but not apartments.… Continue

EOS to share Sackville’s emissions for climate change week

EOS members stand at a booth.
EOS members stand at a booth.
EOS Eco-Energy will start climate change week on January 30th. Photo by EOS Eco-Energy.

Local nonprofit EOS Eco-Energy is excited to present climate change week online starting January 30th.

The week is dedicated to environmental education and sustainable practices, including an online composting with worms workshop, meatless Monday, and checking in on Tantramar’s emissions.

The Tantramar area has been working on its emission targets with EOS Eco-Energy since 2011.

Now, ten years later, Energy Projects Coordinator and Mount Allison University alumna Lauren Clark has some promising statistics.

The Town of Sackville set an emission reduction goal of 10%, and Clark announced that the town managed to reduce its emissions by 31%.

Clark says that NB Power is largely responsible for the significant reduction in emissions.

She breaks down how that happened, and how it is calculated, in a conversation with Meg Cunningham.

Climate change week will take place from January 30th to February 5th. 

Check out climate change week events on EOS Eco-Energy’s website.

For more information on the community’s emissions, Clark presented the information during a special town council meeting on December 7th which is available on YouTube. 

Clark’s findings will be presented to the public on February 2nd, between 12 and 1pm. 

She welcomes any questions about the data or about EOS in general.… Continue

Get it to-go: Sackville restaurants close their dining rooms temporarily

A street sign says "Open for takeout!"
A street sign says "Open for takeout!"
Mel’s Tearoom owner Dave Epworth says the last orange phase lost the diner a lot of business. Photo from Mel’s Tearoom Facebook.

Some Sackville businesses are going above and beyond orange phase restrictions this time around.

Orange level restrictions require sit-down restaurants to check that all patrons are only sitting with their own single-household bubble, maintain social distancing and a capacity, and strict mask-wearing policies.

All establishments are also required to keep diligent records of all customers’ contact information.

A few restaurants and bars around town say that this is too much to ask, and not as safe as take-out.

Cranewood's Facebook updating stating the closure of their dining room due to COVID-19.
Cranewood announced the switch to takeout only shortly after the province went orange. Photo from Cranewood Facebook.

Malcolm Campbell, a manager at Cranewood on Main, says the bakery is doing take-out only.

Malcolm Campbell: Number one, safety. We want to limit the exposure. They’re recommending that people don’t eat in restaurants sitting in confined spaces sharing the air. And also, there was talk last orange phase that restaurants were being forced to card people and ensure that people were sitting within their bubble, which is essentially impossible. In Sackville, where half of our clientele is students, whose address and bubbles do not reflect where they actually live. So someone may be in a bubble, two people may live together in the same apartment, but have addresses in different provinces because they’re university students. We have no way of verifying if people are actually in their bubble, and we want to follow the rules.… Continue

Province rejects Sackville’s request for federal COVID relief

Minister of Local Government and MLA for Moncton East, Daniel Allain. Photo: pcnb.ca

Listen to this story on Tantramar Report, or here:

The province has rejected the town of Sackville’s entire funding request to cover COVID-related costs from a federal fund designed for that purpose.

The federal government allotted $41.1 million to local governments in New Brunswick, the province’s share of a $2-billion package announced back in July.

Most provinces opted to distribute funding on a per capita basis, immediately informing municipalities how much they would receive. In New Brunswick, local government minister Daniel Allain instead required local governments to do some paperwork.

Local governments were required to report the net impact of COVID-19 on their 2020 finances, and then have a resolution passed by their elected councils.

The request was light on details, says Sackville treasurer Michael Beal, but town staff went ahead and came up with a request of just under $291,000.

“We basically reviewed and spent a lot of time going through our books, our records and documenting a lot of this,” Beal told town council last night. “We did have savings that were non-COVID-related,” he said, which “would have happened either way.”

The province rejected the town’s claims, including:

  • payroll costs relating to COVID-19,
  • Levee on the Lake costs, as a COVID event,
  • costs relating to use of the arena as a Mount Allison welcome centre,
  • and sewage treatment costs that were credited back to customers as a form of COVID relief to ratepayers.
Continue

Sackville Film Society screenings postponed

The Vogue Cinema with a blank marquee.
The Vogue Cinema with a blank marquee.
Thaddeus Holownia sent an email out to Sackville Film Society and posted to Facebook. Photo by Vogue Cinema.

New Brunswick’s COVID-19 cases continue to climb this week, resulting in the entire province sliding back to orange level restrictions. 

These restrictions allow for entertainment venues, including cinemas, to remain open with a COVID-19 operational plan. 

Such a plan includes an occupancy limit of 50, strict social distancing, continuous mask use, and record keeping. 

Despite the province’s permission, Thaddeus Holownia says the Sackville Film Society is postponing all screenings until next week at the earliest, citing safety concerns. 

Most of the members of the private club are older people, Holownia mentions. 

On Wednesday, Holownia announced the decision on Facebook “after much discussion.”

The feedback from members, he says, has been “100% positive.” 

The Sackville Film Society will reevaluate next week, and base their decision on COVID-19 case numbers.… Continue

Sackville says Happy New Year online

Sackville Town Crier David Fullerton delivers the New Year’s Day message online, as part of a COVID-friendly Mayor’s levee.

The town of Sackville marked the beginning of 2021 much like it has many events of the past year: online.

In a video posted to the town’s social media page, Town Crier David Fullerton delivered a New Year’s Message for Sackville in the town’s online version of its annual levee.

“My wish for 2021 is that we all be there for each other during this difficult time, in this new way of life,” says Fullerton. “It is amazing how uplifting and appreciated a simple phone call can be for someone who is alone and confined to home.”

The video also features a speech from Deputy Mayor Ron Aiken, a poem read by Sackville Poet Laureate Shoshanna Wingate, and a montage of photos from 2020 featuring many of the town’s rec programs in action.

The video also included a reprieve of this year’s COVID- friendly Canada Day celebrations featuring local fiddlers Stacey Read, The Carter Girls, Quinn MacAskill, Del Wheaton, Royal Hicks, Brianna Ogden, Hannah Wade, and Ray Legere.

Local Sackville fiddlers play together online for Canada Day 2020. Featuring: Stacey Read, The Carter Girls, Quinn MacAskill, Del Wheaton, Royal Hicks, Brianna Ogden, Hannah Wade, and Ray Legere. Photo: Facebook

In his message, Deputy Mayor Ron Aiken gave an overview of some of the accomplishments of the past year, including:

  • adjusting programming and services to meet COVID-19 safety guidelines;
  • hiring a new CAO (Jamie Burke) and senior manager of corporate projects (Kieran Miller);
  • collaborating with Mount Allison on the Mt.
Continue

A year in review with MLA Megan Mitton

Megan Mitton smiles, wearing green.

Megan Mitton, MLA for the Memramcook-Tantramar riding, was re-elected in September with 41.6% of the votes. 

Mitton has been MLA through 2020, the year of the COVID-19 pandemic, a snap election, and the near closure of overnight services at the Sackville Memorial Hospital. 

CHMA news called Mitton to review the ups and downs of this year. 

Megan Mitton smiles, wearing green.
Megan Mitton, MLA for Memramcook-Tantramar. Photo by Green Party of New Brunswick.

Listen to the full interview here:

Meg Cunningham: Back to the beginning of the year, which feels like forever ago, [was] the threat of closure of the Sackville Memorial Hospital. I was curious to know where we are at with that, or where the government is at with that in terms of the security of the Sackville Memorial Hospital.

Megan Mitton: Yeah, it is hard to remember. Everything pre-pandemic does feel very long ago. But that is one of the major things that happened in our riding, and then in several areas in the province earlier this year. We were successful in getting the government to at least promise that they weren’t going to be shutting down our ERs [emergency rooms] overnight… we asked them to say that in the house. They have maintained that, that is true. However, we still don’t have a very clear picture of what’s going to happen. So bringing us up to right now, I know that the Minister of Health has requested visions, the vision for health care, from some different groups.… Continue

A year in review with Ron Aiken, Sackville’s deputy mayor

Deputy Mayor Ron Aiken in 2017. Photo: Warktimes.com

As part of CHMA’s year-in-review week on Tantramar Report, Erica Butler sat down with Sackville’s deputy mayor, Ron Aiken, to reflect back on 2020.

Aiken looks back (and forward) on the town’s experience with the COVID-19 shutdown, the threat to services at the Sackville hospital, hirings and retirings with the town, and the postponed municipal elections due to happen this May.

Here’s the conversation:

TRANSCRIPT:

ERICA BUTLER:
Deputy Mayor Ron Aiken, thank you so much for joining me.

RON AIKEN:
Oh, my pleasure.

EB:
So 2020 obviously has been dominated by COVID-19. So maybe we should start off by harkening back to March in Sackville, and talking about how that initial lockdown affected the town.

RA:
To go back, it was March 13th when everything locked down. And for the town that meant we had to do a lot of very complex things in a big hurry. We had to essentially develop an operational plan for COVID, about how we’re going to conduct the town business and so on. We had to start working with Mount A about getting the students here safely, both for themselves and for the rest of town. So we developed that Mount A-Community bubble. And then we had to do the council meetings, virtually, which I guess people will remember took a couple of months to sort out all the glitches. But I think we got it down pretty well after a couple of tries.… Continue

A year in review with Laura Reinsborough, director of Food For All NB

A person standing in a garden holding gardening tools.
A person standing in a garden holding gardening tools.
Director of Food For All NB, Laura Reinsborough, says she has learned plenty from the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo from Food For All NB.

Food For All NB is a non-profit organization that aims to educate New Brunswickers about food security.

As director, Reinsborough has had a busy year since COVID-19 complicated access to food security programs across the province.

She and her team were quick to respond by publishing grant opportunities, food maps, and community resources on Food For All NB’s website.

Reinsborough provides a detailed recap of what Food For All NB accomplished in 2020, and suggests some long-term solutions to food insecurity in New Brunswick.

The full interview is available here:

RELATED:

Continue

Spotting the Great Conjunction from Sackville

Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

It looks like Sackville might have a partially clear night this Saturday, December 19. If we are so lucky, we might get a clear enough view of the night sky to see a once-in-400-year phenomenon called the Great Conjunction.

Erica Butler called up Mount Allison professor and astronomer Catherine Lovekin to explain exactly what it was all about:

CATHERINE LOVEKIN:
So, a conjunction is just when two objects appear close together in the sky. This conjunction is between Jupiter and Saturn, which are two of the largest planets in the solar system. And so they’re pretty much the brightest planets. They’re easy to see. They’re very easily visible in the sky, even if you live somewhere with lots of light pollution.

This conjunction is particularly interesting, because it’s the closest they’ve come together in almost 400 years. The last time they were this close together in the sky was in 1623. And so it’s just a very pretty sight. They’re going to be very, very close. You will still be able to distinguish them, depending on conditions, but they’re going to be very, very close together.

I was out on Wednesday night, which was very clear, and it was really beautiful, because they were right above the new moon, and it was really, really nice to see.

ERICA BUTLER:
Do you have special spots that you like to go stargazing in and around Sackville and Tantramar?

CL:
Well, this was just from the end of my driveway.… Continue