Category: Community News

NS court hearing on Isthmus responsibility scheduled for March 2025

Train crossing the Chignecto Isthmus at high tide near Aulac in November 2015. Photo taken by Mike Johnson, EMO for Cumberland County.

The legal question of who should pay to protect the roads, railways and wires running across the strip of land connecting New Brunswick and Nova Scotia won’t be settled until at least March of 2025, according to a timeline put forward by Nova Scotia court of appeal judge David Farrar on Wednesday.

Farrar met virtually with lawyers from New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI, and the federal government on Wednesday afternoon to set dates for document filings and a hearing on the question.

Lawyers will have until July 5 this year to file the main evidence and documents in the case, and then the provinces will have until September 13 to file their arguments. The government of Canada will have until January 10 to come back with its argument, and the provinces will have until the end of that month to respond after that. Farrar has set aside two days for the hearing itself, on March 11 and 12, 2025.

Nova Scotia kickstarted the constitutional question in July of last year, asking the court of appeal to determine, “whether the infrastructure protecting the interprovincial transportation, trade and communications links across the Chignecto Isthmus is within the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada.”

The governments of New Brunswick, PEI and Canada were all granted intervener status by Farrar in September, while Cumberland MLA Elizabeth Smith MCCrossin was denied.… Continue

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Mounties’ Daniel Bell talks about getting drafted by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats

Football Mountie Daniel Bell on the field. Image: mta.ca

Graduating Mountie football star Daniel Bell says there were a lot of emotions at play when he saw his name appear as the 34th pick of the 2024 CFL draft, the fourth pick of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

Bell is the third CFL draftee to come out of the Mount Allison Mounties football program in just two years. He heads to Hamilton for training camp this month along with his Mountie colleague, Reece Martin, who was drafted by the Tiger-Cats last year, but ended up returning to play another year for the Mounties.

Bell and Martin’s teammate, and Sackville native Lucas Cormier was drafted last year to the Ottawa RedBlacks, and made the team’s opening day roster in 2023.

Mounties head coach Peter Fraser and director of athletics Jacques Bellefleur dropped by CHMA studios last week to talk about Bell’s hard work, and the impact that the Mounties recent success in the CFL draft can have for the football program.

CHMA started off asking Coach Fraser how big of a deal it is to get drafted into the Canadian Football League.

CHMA also spoke to Daniel Bell from his home in Saint John, to hear about what comes next for the defensive back:

Mount Allison Athletics compiled a list of the Mounties history with the CFL draft, available online here.… Continue

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LeBlanc sentenced to 7 years, forfeits $155k after guilty pleas on drug and weapons charges

Image distributed by the RCMP featuring seized materials for Sackville residence on November 22, 2023.

A Sackville man was sentenced to a total of seven years in prison on Monday, for three sets of drug and weapons crimes dating back to April 2021.

39-year-old Colt LeBlanc was in a Moncton courtroom, where he agreed to facts laid out by federal and provincial Crown prosecutors, outlining three separate search and seizure incidents in 2021, 2022, and 2023.

LeBlanc’s sentence also includes a 10-year prohibition on possessing weapons, a DNA test, and the forfeit of more than $155,000 in cash that was seized by police during the incidents.

LeBlanc’s lawyer Michel Des Neiges said his client had spent most of his life without troubles. Des Neiges said LeBlanc, “had a pretty normal childhood” and that he, “did well in school, and played sports, and was getting along with his young adult life.” But in the last few years, said Des Neiges, “things have gone sideways.”

Des Neiges told the court that LeBlanc was planning to join programs while in the prison system, and intended to seek work as a carpenter once he is eventually released. Des Neiges said that LeBlanc, “does not want this to be dead time for him.”

The judge offered LeBlanc the opportunity to address the court, but he refused. As crown prosecutors read the facts behind his charges, LeBlanc mostly nodded his agreement to the judge.

There were no victim impact statements read at the hearing.… Continue

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Junior Mounties Girls Basketball Club a labour of love for coaches and players

Tom Skabar is head coach of the Mount Allison University Women’s basketball team. He also volunteers his time with the Junior Mounties basketball club. Photo: Tori Weldon

About four years ago, Tom Skabar noticed a gap in the level of basketball being offered to teen girls in the area. So he, with Brad Blenkhorn, founded the Junior Mounties Basketball Club.

“I thought it would be a worthwhile venture to develop a program that kind of forged a connection between the varsity athletes here who have so much to offer and to the aspiring young women who are hoping to be them someday,” said Skabar.

“And then it kind of took off from there.”

The program has three aged-based teams for girls in Westmorland and Cumberland counties. Skabar coaches the under-18 team, co-founder Brad Blenkhorn coaches the under-16 team, and the under-14 team is coached by Keira Dyck and Madison Bennett, who both participated in the program in its early years. 

Sykorah Hussey likes the faster pace and longer season of the Junior Mounties basketball league. Photo: Tori Weldon

Sykora Hussey goes to Amherst Regional High School. She plays on its basketball team, and the Junior Mounties U18 team.

“With high school, since we’re [Division Two], the level isn’t as high as (it is) for Junior Mounties,” said Hussey. “We play against a lot tougher and rougher teams with Junior Mounties. So I feel that it helps us build our skill and our mindset better.”… Continue

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The gardening gloves are off at the Sackville Community Garden

A rainbow over the Sackville Community Garden. Photo: Vanessa Roth

Spring is in the air in Sackville.

This week, the Little Plant Nursery and Open Sky Greenhouses opened for the season at their shared School Lane location, formerly Anderson’s Greenhouse. On Saturday, the Sackville Farmers Market will return to its summer location at Bill Johnstone Memorial Park. And on Sunday, the Sackville Community Garden will host its second annual plant swap and sale at its location on Charles Street.

CHMA spoke to garden organizing committee member Sarah Evans, who says that the garden is benefiting from recent changes in the neighbourhood.

“The new water retention pond trail is all behind the garden,” says Evans, “so now when you’re working there, it’s sort of like you’re surrounded by people walking their dogs and their kids… It’s amazing

Evans says garden members are working on improving the accessibility and flow of the site. Work on the retention pond also created a new cleared area where the gardeners are going to try something new. “We’re going to use [it] as sort of a communal garden,” says Evans. “Instead of getting a plot where one person will take care of it, or a family will take care of it, we’re all going to take care of this, whoever wants to can show up, pitch in, and then take some of the harvest.”

The Sackville Community Garden has been at the Charles Street site since about 2008, says Evans, and features about 25 plots where members grow vegetables individually or in groups.… Continue

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Anglophone East DEC offers concession, but Hogan says he will pursue dissolving the council

Education minister Bill Hogan in an online Q&A hosted by the department on Monday, January 16, 2023. Image: Screencap

The Anglophone East District Education Council has agreed to give up its Charter challenge of the province’s Policy 713, if the Minister of Education promises to leave the District’s policy on student names and pronouns alone. But it doesn’t appear that Minister Bill Hogan will take them up on the offer.

On Thursday evening, Hogan reiterated his intention to dissolve the Anglophone East District Education Council, if the council doesn’t immediately stop its court challenge to the province’s changes to Policy 713. Hogan said in an emailed statement that the DEC leadership has “left me no options but to commence the process for dissolution of the Anglophone East DEC.”

In a letter on April 30, Hogan called out the DEC for spending nearly $280,000 on lawyers and experts in its case against the province, and ordered the council to complete a list of four corrective actions, including dropping its case. Hogan gave a deadline of 5pm Thursday.

The day Hogan sent that letter was also the deadline that Judge Tracey DeWare had given the DEC to file their full claim on Policy 713.

In early April, the DEC had filed preliminary motions asking for a court injunction to prevent the Minister from repealing their policy and dissolving the council while the court considered their case against Policy 713. At a premliminary hearing on April 15, CBC Moncton’s Shane Magee reported that provincial lawyers told Judge DeWare they would seek to toss out the DEC’s full case, once it was filed.… Continue

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NS-NB agreement, $750k in provincial budget to go to prep work on protecting Chignecto Isthmus

Train crossing the Chignecto Isthmus at high tide near Aulac in November 2015. Photo taken by Mike Johnson, EMO for Cumberland County.

Memramcook-Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton says a new memorandum of understanding (MOU) between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to coordinate work on the protection of the Chignecto Isthmus is good news. “It shows some type of progress to governments working together,” Mitton told CHMA, “but we still need a third – we need the feds to be at the table and part of an agreement.”

The Chignecto Isthmus between Sackville and Amherst is home to the only land transportation links between the two provinces. Parts of the Isthmus are at risk of flooding due to predicted sea level rise and extreme weather associated with climate change.

The new MOU says that the two provinces will take on “pre-construction activities to ensure readiness” for one or a combination of the options outlined in a 2021 engineering study. The work outlined in the MOU includes:

  • Data collection
  • Preliminary design
  • Final design
  • Indigenous consultation
  • Regulatory work
  • Stakeholder engagement
  • Land acquisitions

New Brunswick Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure, Richard Ames told Mitton in April that the province has allocated $750,000 in this year’s budget to go towards that work. Ames also said the province has requested $650 million from the federal government to complete the project.

Last July, New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs and Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston announced they would apply to the federal government’s Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, which could cover half the project cost.… Continue

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All-Ages Music Shows Attracts Growing Audience

A punk band plays to a crowd of about 30 people at the Sackville Commons on Friday night. Photo credit: Glenn Barrington

Nearly thirty people showed up at the Sackville Commons on Friday night to watch three New Brunswick punk bands. There was a cover charge, but also a pay-what-you-can option. The idea is to make these shows as accessible as possible, even to kids.

Which is refreshing according to Tantramar Regional High School Student, Seth Thomas.

“A lot of the shows we have here are at Ducky’s or bars, so if I go I’d have to go with a parent,” said Seth.

“And if I want to just hang out with my friends and go to a show, these all-ages shows are pretty awesome for that.”

This is exactly the reaction Glenn Barrington was hoping for when he started the all-ages music series in January. He wanted to provide a place for music lovers to get to gather, regardless of age. So, it isn’t just teenagers who are showing up.

“There’s been really good turnouts, somewhere around 50, 60 people have been coming out,” said Barrington.

“And a really good span of all ages… kids, teenagers, you know, people who are 20s, 30s, 40s all the way up to their, their senior ages, which is awesome.”

Barrington volunteers his time to do this because he grew up organizing and playing in bands, at shows just like this when he was growing up in Sydney Nova Scotia.… Continue

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Listen here: Community Healthcare Meeting, April 25, 2024

Crowd gathered on the floor of the Tantramar Civic Centre for a Community Healthcare Meeting on April 25, 2024. Photo: Bruce Wark

About 400 people gathered on Thursday evening in Sackville for a community meeting on healthcare. CHMA was on site live to broadcast the event.

Above is a recording of the full proceeding, followed by sections organized by speaker below.

Memramcook-Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton

MLA Megan Mitton organized and hosted the meeting, the third one she’s held in Sackville.

“The lack of access to health care for many people in New Brunswick is completely unacceptable,” said Mitton to the crowd. “And sometimes it causes terrible outcomes.”

Community Healthcare Meeting, Sackville NB, April 25, 2024 Part 1 MLA Megan Mitton

“The day after the 2014 election, my dad ended up in the hospital,” recalled Mitton. “And I saw first hand the gaps in the system and how patients fall through them. Unfortunately, things have gotten worse since that time, and we can’t blame it all on the pandemic. There are systemic issues that have been building for a really long time.”

Margaret Melanson, CEO of Horizon Health Network

“It’s our third time being here with you, with a public forum to talk about health care and developments that are happening in your community,” said Melanson, “and also for us to be here, accountable to all of you, the citizens of New Brunswick.”

Community Healthcare Meeting, Sackville NB, April 25, 2024 Part 2 Margaret Melanson (Horizon)

“We know that primary care is the foundation of our health care system,” said Melanson.… Continue

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Daycare seeks lease renewal and zoning change to stay in Dorchester Rec Centre

The DCS Kids Daycare on Facebook.

Tantramar council will vote on the fate of Dorchester’s DCS Kids Daycare at its next regular meeting on May 14. The daycare is seeking a zoning change and approval of a lease renewal, in order to keep operating at its location at the Dorchester Recreation Centre on School Street.

DCS Kids Daycare’s current lease for space at the Dorchester Recreation Centre on School Street expires at the end of June.

Active Living Director Matt Pryde told Tantramar council on Monday that the daycare’s tenancy has been “going really well”. The new three year lease would remain the same as the current one, with DCS Kids Daycare paying $750 per month in rent to the municipality, and covering things like liability insurance and provincial regulatory approval. The town will remain responsible for snow clearing.

The Dorchester Recreation Centre is on School Street, next to the outdoor rink and the Dorchester Consolidated School. Image: Google Earth

DCS Kids Daycare started out in March 2021 inside the Dorchester Consolidated School, and then in 2022 moved to the Dorchester Recreation Centre. Owner Kirsten Weldon says it’s a “fabulous” location. “We love being right by the school, it’s so convenient,” says Weldon. “And we’ve got use of the hockey rink, and the woods, and the park is just down the road. And we’re walking distance to a library.”

Weldon has been looking for ways to expand the after school program capacity at DCS Kids.… Continue

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