Category: Daily News

‘Profound disappointment’ in lack of ceasefire resolution from council at 4th vigil for Gaza victims

On today’s show, we stop in at last night’s vigil outside town hall, calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, and hear about reactions from councillors to calls for a municipal resolution in support of a ceasefire. Sackville Ceasefire Coalition member Sarah Kardash told the crowd gathered that she was profoundly disappointed in Tantramar council for not taking up the call, but the group continues to ask for a resolution from council.

And in briefs: Tantramar council approved everything on their agenda without much ado, including a motion from Councillor Allison Butcher, asking for staggered road closures on April 14 to make way for the Walk a Mile for Sarah’s Smile memorial walk. … Continue

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‘Like a punch in the gut’: Mitton finds progress slow, contingency planning just started on Isthmus protection

Deputy Minister Rob Taylor of the New Brunswick Department of Transportation and Infrastructure, speaking at a legislative committee hearing, February 2, 2024. Screencap: leg.nb.ca

The provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have just started contingency planning for the possibility of flooding on the Chignecto Isthmus before permanent protections can be constructed.

Department of Transportation and Infrastructure (DTI) Deputy Minister Rob Taylor shared the news with Memramcook-Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton is a recent legislative committee hearing in Fredericton.

“It’s a ten year timeframe to turn something around,” Taylor told the committee. “We definitely need a solution in the interim. So I apologize that nothing was done before… but honestly, yes, the past six months, we’ve made a push on it.”

CHMA checked in with Mitton to get her reaction to the news, and updates on her other recent activities. The MLA says the fact that contingency planning had not started sooner “felt like a punch in the gut.”

The Isthmus project only received a passing mention in one of the annual reports that DTI presented to the committee in February, and Taylor admitted that progress has been slow in the two years since an engineering consultant’s report was released outlining options for the project.

“I will say that I have the same mindset that not a lot of progress has happened on this,” said Taylor. “I mandated the team to come up with a critical path schedule, that we could actually identify what activities are slipping or what can we actually get done in the interim while we are waiting for this federal funding that we’re all hearing about.”… Continue

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Fed up with student services at Mt A, group takes their concerns to Board of Regents

On today’s show, a group of student leaders at Mount Allison are sounding the alarm about what they call “a consistent decline” in the services provided by Mount Allison’s student affairs department. We talk with two of those students, Isabella Gallant and Isabella Matchett, about their concerns, including empty food banks, high staff turnover and vacant positions, new resources that sit unapproved and un-released by university administration, and a pattern of reactive policy-making.

Plus in news briefs, we take a look at the agenda for tonight’s Tantramar council meeting, which includes two public presentations and the approval of $110,000 in community grants. … Continue

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Ducky’s new owners share a community-centric vision for the Sackville bar

Left photo: Kate Cogswell with her dog at Ducky’s; Right photo: Sarah Poirier (left) with a friend on the Ducky’s patio. Photos submitted.

One of Sackville’s longest serving watering holes, Ducky’s, has new owners. Sarah Poirier and Kate Cogswell took possession of the bar on February 1.

Poirier and Cogswell said they both discussed the idea of buying the bar with Darren Wheaton separately, but landed on becoming partners when they realized they shared the a vision for what the bar could be. “I think the biggest thing about Duckies is that it it needs to stay a community-centric space,” said Cogswell.

“Yes, it’s a student bar on Friday and Saturday, and the students are a big part of our community so they’re going to be a big part of our bar… but more importantly, we want to be accessible and important to the community as a whole,” she said.

The new owners want people to feel free to ask for a cup of tea, play a board game or simply sit and read a book. They also want to have more planned events like live music, open mic nights or comedians.

Poirier said another planned change is to have more non-alcoholic and low-alcohol drinks. “Because I have a lot of friends and I think Kate does too, who just are not drinkers,” said Poirier. “We really want to keep the vibe as is and just open it up.”

They both acknowledge the work of former owner Darren Wheaton.… Continue

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Meet the new owners of Ducky’s bar: Sarah Poirier and Kate Cogswell

Downtown Sackville’s longest serving watering hole, Ducky’s, has new owners. On today’s show, we talk with Sarah Poirier and Kate Cogswell, who took ownership from Darren Wheaton on February 1. They said it was their unique vision for the bar that made them decide to form the partnership.

Plus in news briefs: a package containing contraband items was seized at Dorchester Penitentiary; New Brunswick Liberal Party leader Susan Holt is planning a tour stop in Sackville; and people between the ages of 17 and 35 are invited to join the Canadian Blood Services stem cell registry today at an event at the Wallace McCain Student Centre, between 11:30am and 5:00pm.… Continue

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Jessica Wilson, Tantramar’s new rec program coordinator, talks Winterfest 2024

It’s Winterfest in Tantramar, featuring all sorts of indoor and outdoor activities across the region, from new theatre productions to snowshoe & hiking excursions to fireworks in downtown Sackville.  On today’s show, we talk with the new program coordinator for Tantramar’s Active Living department, Jessica Wilson, about what’s in store this weekend. 

Plus in news briefs, Sackville’s BIA association is getting involved with Winterfest, and vice-president Lindsay Crossman-Wheaton says the group continues to seek out involvement from local businesses. And Struts Gallery puts out a call for an “immersive” installation that will transform the gallery space this summer. … Continue

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Get ready for a jam-packed Winterfest, says Tantramar’s new rec program coordinator

Winterfest is here, and so CHMA called up Jessica Wilson, the brand new programming director for Tantramar recreation and special events, to ask about the festival’s events and her new job:

Wilson is just finishing her fourth week of work for the municipality, taking over for Deanna Cadman, who served in the position for decades. “Everybody has been super welcoming and very, very supportive,” says Wilson. “It’s definitely going to be a year long teaching session because of all of the events and programs that the municipality puts on throughout the year,” she says.

Tantramar’s new programming coordinator for recreation and special events, Jessica Wilson. Photo: contributed

The position is a perfect fit for Wilson, who just graduated from Dalhousie University with Bachelor of Science in Recreation and a Bachelor of Management. “This is definitely exactly what I was looking for,” says Wilson. After a few summers working in municipal recreation in Cumberland County and Cape Breton, Wilson says she “fell in love with it.”

“And I found that working for a smaller municipality is definitely the best because you get to go out and you get to meet the people, and everybody gets to know who you are,” says Wilson. “It makes everything feel so comfy and welcoming, and you just you want to come to work every day.”

Wilson is hitting the ground running with Winterfest kicking into gear this weekend, including the Frosty Outdoor Party Friday night at Bill Johnston starting at 7pm, with fireworks slated for 8pm.… Continue

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‘People really get behind it’: 25 years of The Sweetest Little Thing

2024 Sweetest Little Thing graphics by KAYA PANTHIER.

For 25 years now, Sackville artists and art lovers have been gathering on Valentine’s Day for the annual fundraising art auction, The Sweetest Little Thing. The annual event raises funds for Sackville’s two non-profit galleries, the Owens and Struts.

Starting this week, over 90 different works are on display at thesweetestlittlething.ca, as well as in person at the Owens Art Gallery. Bidding is open online all week, culminating on Valentine’s Day, when people, whether they’re bidding or not, are invited to gather for a celebration at the Owens.

Paul Henderson is the director at Struts gallery. CHMA stopped by to hear from Henderson about the annual event.

Henderson says the partnership between Struts and Owens is special, and has helped The Sweetest Little Thing become “essential” fundraising for both galleries.

“It’s unique in this world to actually partner together with another organization and pool our resources to create an event that actually benefits both organizations really significantly,” says Henderson.

Every year, the list of artists invited to contribute to the auction grows. The contributing artists for the auction all have a direct relationship with the Owens or Struts, says Henderson, and the list includes local artists and those from farther afield who have shown at the galleries in the past. It also includes the third year cohort of Mount Allison’s Fine Arts program.

Details from larger works up for auction in The Sweetest Little Thing 2024.
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‘Like a punch in the gut’: Mitton finds progress slow, contingency planning just started on Isthmus protection

Memramcook-Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton found out last week that the provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have just started contingency planning for the possibility of flooding on the Chignecto Isthmus, in case dykes breach before a protection solution is built. Mitton made the discovery while questioning Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Deputy Minister Rob Taylor at a legislative committee meeting on Friday. On today’s show, we listen in to some of what Taylor had to say, and speak with Mitton about what she heard, and her other priorities as MLA.

Plus in briefs, Nova Scotia’s Serious Incident Response Team has cleared Amherst police after an October collision and injuries, and an Amherst man is charged with stealing a bucket truck last week. … Continue

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Council to consider $110k in community grants after funding requests totaling over $210k

Tantramar council will be asked to approve $110,000 in community grants to local organizations at their meeting next week, nearly half the total amount of requests for funding that the town received.

Grant requests for 2024 totalled just over $210,000, the largest amount ever in the grant program to date. In 2023, community groups asked for just over $156,000, and that amount reversed a trend that saw requests actually drop in 2021 and 2022, when the program covered just the former town of Sackville. Active Living director Matt Pryde says that expansion of the program to cover the vastly expanded territory and population of Tantramar is a “big part” of the reason for the increase.

This year’s increase in requests was met with only a small increase in budget, an additional $5,000 over the 2023 amount. That means many groups may be left unhappy, unless council choses to make budgetary changes.

The lion’s share of applications and funding go to sports, heritage and arts organizations, but this year’s crop of applicants also included poverty and food security related groups, like the Sackville Food Bank, the Sackville Farmers Market, the Sackville Community Garden, the Open Sky Cooperative, and Greater Dorchester Moving Forward.

Recommendations for operational funding in 2024, from Tantramar council package, January 22, 2024.
Recommendations for special events funding in 2024, from Tantramar council package, January 22, 2024.
Recommendations for capital and sponsorship funding in 2024, from Tantramar council package, January 22, 2024.
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