Premier backs Isthmus gas plant

Susan Holt speaking in the NB legislature last month

New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt appears to have thrown her full support behind NB Power’s proposed gas/diesel generating plant near Centre Village.

Speaking to reporters on Friday, Holt said the province had tried, but failed to find an alternate location for the plant, adding that New Brunswick risks running out of electricity unless the 500 MW facility gets built and that alternative solutions such as grid-scale batteries would be too costly.

She made similar arguments today during a Q & A session on CBC Radio.

“Access to stable electricity is a key condition for economic development,” she said.

“So growing our economy and having the energy we need to grow the economy is one challenge that we’re tackling, at the same time as making sure we have enough energy for New Brunswickers’ demand,” she added.

“We don’t yet have the kind of utility-scale battery solutions that we can deploy at a cost that New Brunswickers can afford,” she said.

Coalition response

Pam Novak at the Atlantic Wildlife Centre

In a news release that responded to Holt’s earlier comments rejecting alternatives Barry Rothfuss and Pam Novak of the Coalition to Protect the Chignecto Isthmus write:

“Wind, solar, and battery systems are available now. Batteries, in particular, could be installed quickly in industrial areas such as the Scoudouc Industrial Park without disturbing wetlands or wildlife habitats — and without needing a gas pipeline at all. That fact alone proves that the push for the Tantramar site is completely unnecessary.”

Rothfuss and Novak, co-founders of the Atlantic Wildlife Centre in Cookville, also write that wind, solar and battery storage are four times more energy-efficient than fossil fuel plants.

“Battery energy storage systems can be deployed faster than gas plants, respond instantaneously to peak demand, and do not require proximity to pipelines — the real reason Tantramar has been selected,” they write.

Minister’s response

Meantime, provincial Environment Minister Gilles LePage has responded to a letter from Rothfuss and Novak without answering their argument that community members were not given any opportunity to comment on the selection of the Centre Village site. They argue that site selection is “a critical, foundational component of any environmental impact assessment process.”

Instead of commenting on site selection, LePage stresses the merits of what he refers to as an Environmental Impact Assessment Determination review.

“Determination reviews are an interactive and iterative process through which the environmental impacts potentially resulting from a proposed project are identified and mitigation efforts are proposed to avoid or minimize significant impacts early in the planning stages of a project,” he writes.

To read LePage’s letter and a similar one from Lori Clark, president and CEO of NB Power click here and here.

To read a recent New York Times article headlined “Once a Gamble in the Desert, Electric Grid Batteries are Everywhere,” click here.

Posted in NB Power, New Brunswick government, Town of Tantramar | Tagged | 7 Comments

UPDATE: Wheel comes full circle as Debbie Wiggins-Colwell wins deputy mayor’s chair

Newly elected Deputy Mayor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell presides over the council adjournment vote last Tuesday

NOTE: This post has been updated to include new information on the handling of the Code of Conduct complaint against Mayor Andrew Black.

In a move that caught some observers by surprise, Tantramar council has elected Debbie Wiggins-Colwell as the town’s deputy mayor.

At last Tuesday’s regular council meeting, she defeated Councillor Josh Goguen, the only other nominated candidate, by a vote of 5-2 gaining the support of Bruce Phinney, Greg Martin, Matt Estabrooks and Barry Hicks along with her own vote.

Councillors Michael Tower and Josh Goguen voted for Goguen while Mayor Andrew Black and Councillor Allison Butcher were absent.

Wiggins-Colwell will serve as deputy mayor until the next municipal election on May 11, 2026. The post comes with an annual pay raise of $5,258. The deputy mayor receives an annual salary of $31,548 while councillors get $26,290. Tantramar’s mayor is paid $52,581 per year.

“It’s a great feeling,” Wiggins-Colwell told Warktimes after her win. “I’m glad I had the confidence of my council.”

She acknowledged that the honour has been a long time in coming.

“Yes it has,” she said, “but it’s been a learning curve right straight through, so it’s been good.”

Black blocks vote

Before the forced amalgamation of the town of Sackville with the village of Dorchester and surrounding local service districts or LSDs, Wiggins-Colwell served as mayor of the former village and was considered a front-running candidate for the Tantramar deputy mayor’s post.

Black blocks vote on deputy mayor in January 2023

But in a controversial move that led to a code of conduct complaint against him, Mayor Black refused to give unanimous consent to add a vote for deputy mayor to the council’s first regular meeting agenda in January 2023.

The provincially imposed procedural bylaw requires a vote for deputy mayor at council’s first meeting and it has never been clear why it was not on the agenda.

Black himself explained his decision to block the vote this way:

“We have not had an opportunity to interact with one another. I would like us to be able to know each other and have an understanding of who we are as councillors and as council, before we make the decision of who would be the deputy mayor,” he said at the time.

The election for deputy mayor did not happen until February 2023 when Greg Martin narrowly defeated Wiggins-Colwell by 5 votes to 4.

Martin, who represents the former Point de Bute LSD, was supported then by Mayor Black and councillors Michael Tower, Allison Butcher, Josh Goguen and himself while councillors Matt Estabrooks, Bruce Phinney, Barrie Hicks and Wiggins-Colwell voted for her.

Code of Conduct complaint

Les Hicks

On August 7, 2023, Sackville resident Les Hicks filed a Code of Conduct complaint against Black for failing to follow proper procedures. He received a brief letter eight weeks later from then Deputy Mayor Martin saying council had met to review and discuss the complaint, adding: “Council has determined no violation of the Code of Conduct had been breached.”

An accompanying letter from Black acknowledged “error” adding that nine months later, members of council and town administrators “now have a better understanding” of the council procedures bylaw “and will work together to ensure process is followed.”

Hicks himself was not satisfied telling Warktimes he was disappointed and troubled that there was no explanation about why council had determined there had been no breach of the code of conduct.

In his response to council, he wrote:

“This might seem like a trivial matter and it might appear that I am personally persecuting Mayor Black but I assure you this is not the case. I voted for Mayor Black because of the commitment he made to transparent and accountable governance and I expect him to adhere to this promise.”

Warktimes seeks information

On November 24, 2025, the chair of the new local governance commission warned all municipal councils in New Brunswick that provincial law requires code of conduct complaints to be discussed and voted on in public.

Warktimes e-mailed CAO Jennifer Borne and Acting Town Clerk Becky Goodwin to ask for information on what happened when Tantramar council met behind closed doors to discuss the complaint against Black and how it decided that he had not violated the code of conduct.

Goodwin responded with documents from two closed-door meetings, the first on August 15, 2023:

 

The second, closed-door meeting was held on September 26, 2023:

The documents indicate that although a majority felt there was merit to the complaint on August 15th, by the second meeting on September 26th, the majority had decided no action should be taken.

Provincial law requires code of conduct complaints to be discussed in public, but since that wasn’t done, there is no way of knowing why the councillors who felt the complaint had merit, decided later that no action should be taken.

Mayor Black was not only present at both meetings when the complaint against him was discussed, he was also allowed to vote on whether it had merit and how it should be handled.

Posted in Town of Tantramar | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Judges side with Irvings, other timber firms on Aboriginal title claim

But Indigenous chiefs vow to fight on, saying they will seek an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada

By: John Chilibeck, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter. Source: The Daily Gleaner December 12, 2025

The Wolastoqey Nation has hit a setback in its title claim for a huge chunk of New Brunswick’s territory, losing at the New Brunswick Court of Appeal. Photo:John Chilibeck/Brunswick News

First Nations have suffered a major setback in their title claim for more than half of New Brunswick’s territory.

The province’s highest court issued a written decision Thursday agreeing with many of the arguments presented by timber firms with huge holdings in the western half of New Brunswick that were concerned they’d lose control of their land.

The companies had appealed a lower-court decision removing them from the title claim process, but kept their lands in it, a precedent they said was completely unfair and an affront to the law.

The six Wolastoqey communities along the St. John River and its tributaries still consider those vast forests their own, and wanted a say on how they were used or get all or some of them back.

They say they never surrendered their territory and believe the Peace and Friendship treaties, the first signed between Indigenous chiefs and the British Crown three centuries ago, prove it.

“It is plain and obvious that this claim has no chance of success at trial,” said Justice Ernest Drapeau, writing on behalf of the three-judge panel on the New Brunswick Court of Appeal.

They ruled private lands are no longer subject to a possible declaration of Aboriginal title.

Legal twists & turns

People who worried about private property rights celebrated the decision, the latest in a series of legal twists and turns since Indigenous chiefs launched the title claim five years ago.

Expressing disappointment, one of the Wolastoqey chiefs told Brunswick News her side would try to appeal the case to the Supreme Court of Canada.

New Brunswick’s justice minister said he hoped it was a turning point and encouraged the Indigenous chiefs to sit down and negotiate with the Liberal government over the title claim, which could include financial compensation for their lost land.

“My client runs a small sawmill, and this was a huge burden,” said Nova Scotia lawyer Alex Cameron, who argued the case on behalf of H.J. Crabbe and Sons, the smallest of the three firms that appealed. “Particularly in the context of the trade war and the imposition of tariffs from the United States. So, this was an added burden, and he’s really glad to be out of it.”

J.D. Irving, Limited and Acadian Timber, the other two companies, declined comment.

Crown lands

Nicole O’Bryrne. Photo: University of New Brunswick Law School

The decision does not stop the title claim dead in its tracks. The judge said the Wolastoqey Nation could still pursue “a declaration” of Aboriginal title on Crown lands, owned by the provincial or federal governments, but only “a finding” of Aboriginal title on privately owned lands.

In effect, this means the Wolastoqey Nation can only seek the return of or compensation for about 30,000 parcels of Crown, or publicly owned land, a case it would still have to win in court, according to Nicole O’Byrne, a law professor at the University of New Brunswick.

When it comes to the more than 250,000 parcels of privately owned land in the territory, the nation could argue the land was stolen and given away inappropriately and seek financial compensation from the province and Ottawa.

It would not be able to win a veto over decisions made on privately held land – such as a mine being dug – or seek a share of profits from private firms that make money from the land, such as tree harvesting.

“Justice Drapeau has clarified the issue going forward with this particular litigation, regarding declarations of Aboriginal title on Crown land and land held by private interests,” O’Byrne said.

“That’s a good thing because it provides some certainty. It will be a disappointment for the First Nations, who argued for a much more expansive interpretation of what Aboriginal title meant and that private interests could be held responsible to whatever degree for the fact that the land had moved from government to private interests over the decades.”

Private lands

In the decision, Drapeau, a former chief judge of New Brunswick, said reconciliation between Indigenous people and the Crown, represented by the provincial and federal governments, wouldn’t happen by taking away people’s private property.

In law, people who own private property are called “fee simple” owners.

“In my view, remedial justice favours compensation from the Crown over dispossession of private fee simple owners in all cases,” Justice Drapeau wrote, adding it was especially the case when the land had passed through numerous “innocent hands” through the years.

But that’s little consolation for the Wolastoqey Nation because most of their traditional territory is now in private hands, not publicly owned.

The Wolastoqey Nation’s title claim includes about 60 per cent of New Brunswick. Brunswick News Archive

It’s different in much of Western Canada, particularly British Columbia, where three First Nations have separately launched successfully Aboriginal title claims in different regions. Out west, there is far more Crown land than privately held property.

The nation’s lawyers pursued a legal strategy that went after the land of what they called “industrial defendants,” seven large landowners, including NB Power and several timber firms. They labelled other private property owners, such as homeowners and smaller businesses, “strangers to the claim,” whom they insisted wouldn’t be affected by the title claim.

The former Progressive Conservative government of Blaine Higgs took issue with that idea and said all New Brunswick private property owners were under threat. Spearheaded by former attorney general Ted Flemming, it mounted a spirited defence against the lawsuit, a tactic that was abandoned last year by the incoming Holt Liberal government, which stated they’d prefer to settle the matter outside of court.

Such title cases can take up to 20 years or more and cost millions of dollars in legal fees.

“It’s a lengthy and complex decision, and we will take our time to review it,” said Rob McKee, the attorney general and justice minister, in an interview Thursday.

“But our position remains the same. Our hope is to get to the negotiating table, because that’s where the courts say is the best place to be, for reconciliation and rebuilding our relationships with First Nations. So, I hope this is a turning point in this process and we can get to the negotiating table.”

Supreme Court appeal

Chief Patricia Bernard. Photo: Madawaska Maliseet First Nation

Patricia Bernard, the chief of Madawaska First Nation beside Edmundston, said she wasn’t surprised by the ruling.

“We’re disappointed,” she told Brunswick News. “We still need to comb through it and talk to our lawyers before we decide what to do.”

However, she said the decision by Drapeau and fellow justices Kathleen Quigg and Brad Green didn’t match a recent decision at the British Columbia Supreme Court.

The Cowichan First Nation was successful in having Aboriginal title declared for a portion of the lower Fraser River and a part of the City of Richmond, directly affecting about 150 property owners.

“This decision so totally contradicts the Cowichan decision,” said Bernard, who is also a lawyer. “We now have two provincial court decisions that are so at odds with each other.”

She said the chiefs still had to talk about the ruling, but it was her bet they’d seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. They have 60 days to make that decision.

“We’re going to want to set good precedence, and I’d say a national precedence.”

Within minutes of that interview, the Wolastoqey Nation posted a message on its webpage.

“The Wolastoqey Nation is deeply disappointed by this decision, including its mischaracterization of our claim and its interpretation of the decision being appealed from,” it stated. “We have instructed our lawyers to seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.”

For information about Mi’gmaq land title claims in eastern New Brunswick, click here.

This story from Brunswick News was written by Local Journalism Initiative Reporter John Chilibeck.

Posted in Indigenous affairs, LJI stories, Nova Scotia Government | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Tantramar Council comes out against gas plant on the Isthmus

Councillor Michael Tower

At its meeting on Tuesday, Tantramar Council reversed its position on the proposed 500 MW gas/diesel plant within town limits near Centre Village when it approved a three-part motion from Councillor Michael Tower directing that:

  1. council send a letter to Premier Holt stating it is against the gas plant;
  2. the letter ask for the gas plant project to be suspended until NB Power answers questions from citizens at a public meeting that would also be attended by council’s climate change advisory committee;
  3. and that the letter ask the premier and the provincial minister of the environment to meet with council to discuss its concerns.

The vote was 5-2 with Councillors Tower, Bruce Phinney, Greg Martin, Josh Goguen and Debbie Wiggins-Colwell in favour of the motion while Deputy Mayor Matt Estabrooks and Councillor Barry Hicks were against it.

Mayor Andrew Black and Councillor Allison Butcher were absent.

In September, Council narrowly defeated a previous motion from Tower that called for the cancellation of the gas plant project with the majority arguing that council did not have the authority to make such a demand.

At Tuesday’s meeting, Tower suggested that opponents of the gas plant were concerned about protecting the area’s quality of life “without the threat to our environment, without a threat to our water or our health.”

In opposing Tower’s motion, Deputy Mayor Estabrooks said that representatives from NB Power would be meeting with council on December 17th.

“I myself would like to hear from them and be able to ask them some questions specifically before I vote in favour of this motion,” he said.

Seniors for Climate – Tantramar

Penny Mott making a presentation to council on behalf of Seniors for Climate – Tantramar

Earlier in the council meeting, Penny Mott, speaking on behalf of the group Seniors for Climate – Tantramar, urged council to take a public stand against the gas plant as an audience of about 50 listened.

Mott argued that while the project may make economic sense for NB Power, there would be enormous costs for the people of New Brunswick with the burning of fossil fuels contributing to climate change.

“This project is harmful to humans, wildlife, and the environment in countless ways,” she said, adding that the power utility as well as the federal and provincial governments are not concerned enough about its consequences.

She also pointed to the lack of Indigenous consent.

“To date, there is no approval for this proposal to be built on unceded land,” she said.

“Proceeding without free, prior, and informed consent from First Nations risks violating their inherent and treaty rights affirmed in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which is Canadian law, she added.

“Councillors of Tantramar we do need you to take a public position on this gas plant proposal before it’s too late,” she concluded.

To read a transcript of Mott’s presentation, click here.

Health effects

Retired doctor Harold Popma made a 2-minute presentation to council on the health effects of the gas plant

Council also heard a two-minute presentation from retired doctor Harold Popma speaking on behalf of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment.

He warned about the health effects of the proposed gas plant.

“The burning of fossil gas and diesel in the proposed refurbished jet engines will spill out pollutant chemicals into the air and ultimately also contaminate water and soil,” he said.

“These volatile organic compounds are harmful to our bodies and they can make us sick when we breathe them and when we drink them and over 25 years the effects accumulate,” he added as he urged town council to “stop this proposal.”

To read a transcript of Popma’s remarks, click here.

‘Incredibly positive’

After the council meeting, Meredith Fisher, a member of Seniors for Climate – Tantramar, welcomed the majority vote to oppose the proposed gas plant calling it “incredibly positive.”

“I believe that if I were the premier or the prime minister, having the local government opposed to it carries lots of weight,” she said.

“If we didn’t say that we don’t want it here, they would be very happy to go merrily along and do this crazy project,” she added.

Logan Atkinson, a fellow member of the Seniors group agreed.

“We think it’s the first step towards having our council stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the resistance,” he said.

Posted in climate change, Environment, NB Power, Town of Tantramar | Tagged , | Leave a comment

AWI co-founders urge province to cancel Centre Village gas plant: ‘None of our community concerns are being heard’

Pam Novak & Barry Rothfuss co-founders of the Atlantic Wildlife Institute

The co-founders of the Atlantic Wildlife Institute are calling on the New Brunswick government to cancel NB Power’s plans to build a 500 MW gas and diesel generating plant on the ecologically sensitive Chignecto Isthmus.

Barry Rothfuss and Pam Novak say the environmental costs of the project are “just too outlandish,” a phrase they use in a letter e-mailed to Environment and Climate Change Minister Gilles LePage earlier this month after they had met with in Fredericton on November 20th.

“Public engagement in the Centre Village site selection process simply did not happen,” their letter states referring to NB Power’s announcement on July 14th that the decision had already been made to locate the plant on land it had quietly acquired nearly a year earlier.

“In fact, none of our community concerns are being heard and addressed at the appropriate time before actions are already being taken,” their letter says, adding that the community is being “railroaded” partly through an environmental impact assessment process (EIA) that did not allow for any public participation in selecting a site and partly by pushing the project through as quickly as possible.

“The goal of an EIA is to inform decision-making, and evaluate site alternatives early in the planning  process, allowing potential negative impacts to be avoided or minimized before significant time and money are spent on a specific location,” Rothfuss and Novak write.

False information

They suggest that if NB Power and its American partner PROENERGY had followed proper procedures, they would have consulted with regulatory authorities, the general public and Indigenous First Nations in the earliest stages of planning the project and evaluating a potential site.

Instead NB Power issued a news release in mid-summer suggesting this energy project would be environmentally friendly and supported by Indigenous investment, false information reinforced by PROENERGY filings to regulatory authorities, company statements at public meetings and at Tantramar Town Council.

“Greenhouse gas emissions, the draining of an aquifer, diesel gas backup, destruction of an ecologically sensitive ecosystem and wildlife corridor, light and noise pollution are anything but environmentally friendly,” their letters says.

“Marketing it as an Indigenous led project, [was] a key element in avoiding public scrutiny and trying to fast-track this project once it was announced.”

Rothfuss and Novak write that “this is a core breach of trust” designed to mislead government officials such as Premier Holt and MP Dominic LeBlanc as well as the local population and Indigenous peoples raising suspicions about all other claims made by NB Power and PROENERGY.

“Even with nothing further, it is sufficient to justify cancellation of the project.”

PROENERGY has already built a 1.5 kilometre access road to the site

3-legged stool

“There is no question this was done intentionally,” Rothfuss said in an interview with Warktimes.

“This was built on a three-legged stool approach. The first was to blindside us,” he added by depriving people of the ability to contribute their thoughts during the site selection process on how they would be affected.

“The second thing they did was lie to us. They had to promote this as something that was green and Indigenous-led,” he said.

“The third element is railroading us. They’re pushing this as hard as they can push it on an unrealistic timeline so we don’t have the time to really even research the information fast enough.”

Rothfuss and Novak’s letter says in calling for cancellation of the project, they speak on behalf of the Protect the Chignecto Isthmus Coalition they have formed with 17 other organizations as well as many others that support it behind the scenes.

They write that all are concerned about the triple crisis of biodiversity loss, climate change and pollution outlined in Canada’s official 2030 Nature Strategy on halting and reversing the loss of diverse species in the natural world.

They also point to the 2007 report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that identified the two most vulnerable locations in North America: New Orleans and the Chignecto Isthmus.

In an e-mail to Warktimes last week, a communications officer for the provincial environment department said Minister LePage would respond to the Rothfuss, Novak letter once the information in it had been “appropriately reviewed.”

To read the AWI letter, click here

Posted in climate change, Environment, NB Power, Town of Tantramar | Tagged , | 5 Comments

From ‘boom flail mower’ to Civic Centre mural: Tantramar considers $1.8 million in capital spending next year

Tantramar Treasurer Michael Beal

At their regular council meeting on Tuesday, December 9th, members of Tantramar Town Council will be asked to approve a $1.845 million capital budget with no transfer of money into reserve funds to finance future projects.

“It is actually a reduction if you compare that to last year,” Treasurer Michael Beal said on Wednesday during a special council meeting.

He added the reduction in the total capital budget was necessary because of the provincially imposed freeze on property tax assessments.

Beal said last year’s general capital budget included $1.755 million in spending with an additional $250,000 transfer to reserves for a total of $2.005 million.

“The total capital request from [town] managers in 2026 was $4,478,000,” he added before presenting a series of slides showing which projects town managers were proposing to finance next year and which ones they thought could be deferred.

Public works

Michelle Sherwood, superintendent of public works

Michelle Sherwood, superintendent of public works, commented on a slide showing her department’s plans to spend $1.093 million next year on a variety of projects including $100,000 for resurfacing Woodlawn Road, $60,000 for resurfacing Samantha Court, $50,000 for a sidewalk replacement on King Street and $275,000 to replace the sidewalk plow that broke down last winter in Sackville.

She said public works is also asking for a $75,000 “boom flail mower” with a 13-foot reach that could clear vegetation from road shoulders.

“It will attach to the sidewalk plow and we’re currently paying contractors to mow our shoulders once in the summertime,” she said, adding that the mower could clear the worst spots on a weekly basis if needed.

Sherwood also outlined plans to spend $29,000 to improve the entrance to the Sackville Library that would include making it more accessible.

“Right now if you have a wheel chair and you’re having a hard time, you go in one door and then you have to shift over to go through the second door,” she explained.

Later Sherwood presented another slide showing public works projects that managers are proposing to defer:

Recreation spending

Matt Pryde, director of active living and culture outlined $417,000 in proposed capital spending including:

  • $125,000 to replace a condensor that is critical to the proper functioning of the ice plant at the Civic Centre rink;
  • $105,000 to replace the flooring upstairs in the Civic Centre mezzanine and lounge area as well as installing proper, skate-friendly flooring at the players’ entrance area;
  • $25,000 to improve trails including the TransCanada rails trail if council approves a plan to take control of the 18 kilometres within town boundaries;
  • $65,000 to replace the deteriorating Lilas Fawcett Park boat launch;
  • $15,000 to remove overgrown shrubs and non-native plants to make Sackville’s Memorial Park more visible from the road;
  • $17,000 to modernize the splash pad at Bill Johnstone park that was installed in 2014.

Matt Pryde, director, active living and culture

Pryde is also proposing to spend $10,000 on a mural to improve the look and feel of the Civic Centre rink.

“It would be a large art piece that would cover a big chunk of the wall and the dressing room too,” he said, “so where the banners currently are and the banners would be hung over the ice surface which was our plan all along.”

When Councillor Bruce Phinney asked who would be doing the mural, Pryde said he hasn’t decided yet.

“We talked about potentially sending it out as bit of a contest for kids to develop a concept for the mural and then hire an artist to do the actual implementation,” he said.

“We’ve also talked about involving fine arts students at Mount Allison, but we haven’t gotten that far along yet.”

Visitor Information Centre

Jeff Taylor, director of community and corporate services, is proposing to spend $62,000 on capital projects including $40,000 on digital display signs and $22,000 to replace the flooring in the Visitor Information Centre (VIC).

He said the building’s original flooring is getting old and worn.

“Also it’s problematic for food vendors. For example, the Sackville Farmers Market looked at the Visitor Information Centre as a possible location for the winter this year, but they were unable to use it because of the carpet flooring,” he said.

“It’s something that’s in dire need of a update anyway, but it also gives more flexibility to organizations that would do things like serve food,” he added.

Special capital projects

Council also heard about proposed plans for two special capital projects including a $4 million replacement of the Sackville fire department’s aerial unit.

Chief Craig Bowser said Sackville bought a used 75 foot unit in 2013 that is now 30 years old.

Sackville Fire Chief Craig Bowser

“We are proposing a 100 foot aerial,” he said, “and this would assist the fire department greatly not only for high-rise buildings, but also at the university [and] Dorchester Penitentiary.”

“We would submit an application for borrowing now,” said Michael Beal.

“The plan would be to tender later in 2026 or by early 2027 at the latest,” he added.

Deputy Mayor Matt Estabrooks wondered if the town could buy another used one to save money.

“Yes, there is a realistic picture there that we could look for a good used unit,” Bowser said, “like the one we have currently.”

In the meantime, Beal suggested making an application to the province to borrow the full amount for a new one to keep the town’s options open.

He also said it might be possible to finance it out of reserve funds.

Treasurer Beal showed a slide about the multi purpose building that Sackville town council began talking about in 2021 when the projected cost was $3.6 million.

He said costs have risen sharply and such a project could easily cost $6 to $10 million now or maybe even more.

“It is not being recommended at this time,” he said. “The next large capital project would be the aerial and we would look at [the multi purpose building] either through finding [outside] infrastructure funding or look at it for discussion between 2028 and 2029 as the next large capital project.”

Matt Pryde said that when Sackville held community consultations in 2021, several needs were identified including a theatre, a community space, a kitchen, 7,000 square feet for the Farmers Market and perhaps space for a gymnasium as well.

“I suspect some of this will come up in the Recreation Master Plan and then before you build any large centre like that, you’re going to want to do some community consultation to see what the real needs are,” Pryde said.

Posted in Town of Sackville, Town of Tantramar | Tagged | Leave a comment

Memramcook mayor, councillors & residents hear warnings about proposed 500 MW gas/diesel plant

Organizer Patricia Leger addressing the information session in Memramcook on Monday night. Photo: Meredith Fisher

About 60 people attended an information session in Memramcook Monday evening to hear about the environmental implications of the proposed 500 MW gas/diesel plant near Centre Village on the Chignecto Isthmus.

“I felt pretty excited that the whole issue was moving beyond Tantramar,” Patricia Leger, who organized and moderated the session, said Wednesday during an interview with Warktimes.

“We in Memramcook are only 20 kilometres away,” she added, “so it feels very close.”

Leger pointed out that the poster for the French-language meeting asked: “Pourquoi Memramcook Doit S’Inquiéter?” indicating why Memramcook should be concerned.

“I think a lot of people in Memramcook don’t even know that it will affect them,” she said, adding that Mayor Maxime Bourgeois and several local councillors attended the session.

She said the mayor asked about the potential effects on the underground aquifers that feed water supplies in the village and the areas around it, an especially sensitive issue after a summer of extreme drought.

The municipal council was so concerned about people’s wells running dry, it announced a program to pay up to $1,000 per household for water deliveries to their homes.

Memramcook offered a similar program during a drought in 2020.

In an  e-mail to Warktimes, Bourgeois said he doesn’t know enough yet to comment on the proposed gas plant project.

“I am certain that we will have the chance to discuss the matter in the near future,” he added.

For her part, Patricia Leger says the gas plant project would affect people in the whole region including in the predominantly French-speaking municipality of Cap-Acadie on the Northumberland Strait.

She added that NB Power should be answering people’s environmental questions rather than leaving it up to the American company PROENERGY, which is current seeking environmental approvals from the province.

“To me this is so ludicrous because it’s like the company that stands to make money off of this is going to tell us about the negative impacts. They’re not. We need answers from NB Power.”

She said she sees parallels to the fight against shale gas exploration in 2013 that led to a moratorium on fracking.

“The camaraderie that happened all over the province during the shale gas movement is what we need here too because people have eco-anxiety ahead of time, but now with it coming so close, it’s very stressful, so we really need to work together and support each other,” Leger said.

Health effects

Retired family doctor Renée Turcotte. Photo: Le Moniteur Acadien

Renée Turcotte, chair and founder of the New Brunswick committee of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE NB) warned about the severe health and environmental effects of gas plants during the meeting in Memramcook on Monday.

She repeated her concerns about the lethal effects of air pollution during an interview with Warktimes the next day.

“It has been proven that fossil fuels are dangerous for health,” she said, “and that air pollution is killing 15,000 people in Canada each year.”

The retired family doctor also referred to the warming effects of burning fossil fuels.

“We know that the heat is killing people,” she said. “During the heat dome in British Columbia in 2021, 619 people died. So that’s another concern.”

Turcotte said that gas plants have been shown to increase health-care costs.

“The Americans know that the plants cause a lot of health effects and they come to pollute our province.,” she said. “We are an area to be sacrificed.”

At the same time, she expressed hope that the proposed gas/diesel plant near Centre Village can be stopped just as fracking was stopped.

“I’m sure a lot of people understand the problem,” she said, “and I’m pretty sure we’ll be able to stop it. And if we are able to convince our government of the dangers and the costs, we’ll be able to stop it.

“The more people we keep informed,” Turcotte added, “and the more pcople can come to these meetings and be informed, the better it will be.”

During the meeting,  Juliette Bulmer one of the organizers of the Stop the Tantramar Gas Plant Group and Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton also expressed their opposition to the proposed project.

The four speakers at the Memramcook information session, L-R: Dr. Renée Turcotte, Patricia Leger, Juliette Bulmer, MLA Megan Mitton. They are holding postcards addressed to Premier Holt. About 60 people sent messages to Holt about the proposed gas plant.  Photo: Daniel Beaudry

Posted in climate change, Environment, Town of Tantramar | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Sackville fire chief says firefighters are ‘tiring’ with record call volumes. Dept. is also under full strength

Councillor Allison Butcher

After hearing about heavy call volumes during a Tantramar council meeting last week, Councillor Allison Butcher  asked a basic question about the Sackville fire department: “Do we have enough volunteer firefighters?”

She was responding to Sackville Fire Chief Craig Bowser’s report that his department responded to 20 calls for service in a one-month period from mid-October to mid-November.

Those calls included nine motor vehicle collisions, four commercial fire alarms, two requests for assistance from Ambulance New Brunswick, one water rescue, one utility pole fire, one vehicle fire, one rubbish fire and one carbon monoxide alarm.

“With so many calls  for service, is this something that we should be having on our radar moving forward that are we starting to outgrow having a volunteer fire station?” Butcher asked.

“Or do we need to enlarge how many fire members we have, or is it all good?” she continued.

Record call volumes

“Just to give you an idea of where we are this year in call volume compared to last year, we’re up 78 calls for the same reporting period,” Bowser answered, adding that in the years before the COVID pandemic, annual call volumes were about 160 to 170.

Sackville Fire Chief Craig Bowser

“Last year was our biggest call volume on record at 223, I believe it was. We’re at 275 calls for service right now,” he said as he predicted this year’s calls would go well over 300.

“So, to answer your questions, our members are tiring because it’s expected of them to train every Thursday night for two-and-a-half, three hours and then respond to all these fire calls,” Bowser said.

“A lot of the calls are nothing in significance, but still, from the time they leave their employer to the time they go back, it pretty well chews up an hour.”

He added that some employers are now reluctant to let staff go until a second alarm has been called to indicate a fire is serious enough to require more volunteer firefighters.

Later during the public question period, Chief Bowser reported that Sackville Fire & Rescue has 35 or 36 volunteer firefighters on its current roster, seven or eight below the full complement of 43.

Long, troubled tale

The department has been unable to recruit enough volunteers to fill its full roster for more than four years after Warktimes first reported that about 17 had resigned over allegations of bullying, harassment and favouritism.

After Warktimes published a second report in which more former firefighters spoke about the persistently low morale in the department, the former town of Sackville hired Montana Consulting to conduct a workplace assessment, but refused to release its report on the grounds that under the law, personnel investigations must remain private.

The former town reclassified volunteer firefighters as part-time employees subject to the town’s social media use policy which bans any commentary that would reflect badly on how the town is run. It also prohibited firefighters from talking to the media requiring them to refer any request for information or comment to the chief.

Sackville brought in a “whistleblowing” policy requiring firefighters to report any activities they considered illegal or unethical to the fire chief, the CAO or the mayor.

New Brunswick’s Ombud upheld the town’s decision to keep the Montana report secret as did the Court of King’s Bench.

And when Councillor Bruce Phinney tried to persuade his colleagues to order release of the Montana report, all but one of them voted no.

Posted in Sackville Fire & Rescue, Town of Sackville, Town of Tantramar | Tagged , | 2 Comments

UPDATE: Tantramar town council discusses whether Farmers Market belongs in the Civic Centre

Just By Nature Bath & Body Care display at Farmers Market on the Civic Centre mezzanine level overlooking the hockey rink. Photo: Facebook

The following report contains updated information from Matt Pryde, director, active living and culture e-mailed to Warktimes on December 2, 2025.

Tantramar Town Council held a lively 18-minute discussion on Monday about whether the Sackville Farmers Market belongs in the Tantramar Civic Centre during the winter.

“Do I think it’s the right place for it? I really don’t,” said Councillor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell.

“I don’t think the market should interfere with our scheduling the hockey.”

Wiggins-Colwell was referring to the town’s request that the Tantramar Regional High School and the Sackville Minor Hockey Club avoid scheduling their home teams to play in the Civic Centre arena between 9 a.m. and noon on Tournament Saturdays when the Farmers Market is underway.

In his update to Warktimes on December 2nd, Matt Pryde, director, active living and culture says the town’s recommendation is not a blanket one, just during tournaments.

“It should be noted that for all Sackville Minor Hockey Tournaments, the Sackville Skating Club is on the ice from 9:00 a.m.-11:15 a.m. anyway, so Minor Hockey would simply need to schedule the Sackville Team to play at 12:45 p.m. rather than 11:30 a.m.  In the case of the Tantramar Titans, the Titan Boys have traditionally played at 1:00 p.m. anyway, as they did this year, and parking was a non-issue,” Pryde’s update continues.

In a two-page report to council, Pryde suggested that not scheduling hockey then would alleviate congestion in Civic Centre parking lots, although he also pointed out that on November 15th when people complained about lack of parking, there were spots available in both the paved and gravel lots and the overflow parking areas at the back weren’t used at all.

Tantramar recreation manager Jamie Ferguson

Pryde was not at Monday’s council meeting, but his report was presented by recreation manager Jamie Ferguson who explained that the Farmers Market had been considering using the activity centre at Bill Johnstone Park in the winter, but there were two problems.

“It’s much smaller to fit all the vendors inside and the second one is that in a winter storm, we couldn’t guarantee that it would be plowed and open for the market on Saturdays,” he said.

When Councillor Wiggins-Colwell expressed concerns about outside market vendors blocking fire lanes, Sackville Fire Chief Craig Bowser said his department does not use those areas as fire lanes at all.

Councillor Barry Hicks sided with Wiggins-Colwell.

“I don’t agree with changing the hockey schedules,” he said. “It is an arena, it’s not a farmers market.”

“I think it’s important for council and staff and the public to understand that the building is called the Tantramar Memorial Civic Centre,” said Mayor Andrew Black.

“It’s not an arena. It’s not a rink,” he added. “It’s a Civic Centre, meaning that it is open to the public and we get user groups from all over the place renting that for many, many different things,” he said.

“It just so happens that it has an ice surface that we play an awful lot of hockey on, which is wonderful, but we rent it out for birthday parties. We rent it out for all kinds of events upstairs.”

Councillor Barry Hicks

When Councillor Hicks suggested scheduling the bylaw officer on Saturday mornings to enforce parking restrictions in handicapped or accessible spots at the Civic Centre, Treasurer Michael Beal said that could be done because the officer is already on duty enforcing the overnight winter parking ban in Sackville that begins on December 1st.

Matt Pryde’s report to council concludes that the Titans hockey tournament co-existing with the Farmers Market was “a big success” on November 15th.

“Looking at security footage, we counted 104 tournament attendees crossing over to visit the Market as well, further strengthening the experience of the tournament attendee and revenue for the market vendors.”

Vanessa Blackier, who manages the Farmers Market, says she has noticed new people coming to the market in its new, winter location.

“There’s a lot of cross-pollination that’s been happening between Civic Centre users and also Farmers Market patrons,” she adds.

“I think there are a lot of positive things that are starting and we’re just at the beginning.”

Blackier says the Farmers Market pays $100 each Saturday to rent the Civic Centre space which is warm and well lit.

“One thing that’s really nice is there’s also room for customers to just visit with each other.

“A huge part of farmers’ markets is the social aspect and sometimes that doesn’t get touched on as much, but it’s really a place where community can come together,” she says.

” I really feel like it’s a very positive space.”

To read the full text of Pryde’s e-mail update, click here.

Sackville Farmers Market in the Civic Centre. Photo: Lara MacMillan, CHMA

Posted in Town of Tantramar | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Tantramar council hears about harassment, intimidation of elected officials

Deputy Mayor Matt Estabrooks

Tantramar’s Deputy Mayor says the harassment of public officials has become “alarmingly normalized with widespread verbal and online abuse creating fear, emotional fatigue and discouraging public service participation.”

Matt Estabrooks made the comment Monday during town council discussion of a symposium that he attended along with Mayor Andrew Black and Councillor Allison Butcher earlier this month in Fredericton.

The symposium on the harassment and intimidation of elected municipal officials was jointly sponsored by the Union of Municipalities of New Brunswick and the provincial Association of Francophone Municipalities.

“I have personally experienced several instances of inappropriate behaviour both from the public and unfortunately even from other elected officials as well,” Estabrooks said, “involving shouting and intimidation both in council chambers and at other municipal events, even so far as shouting at my family and I while at home in my own yard on a weeknight.”

The deputy mayor also mentioned receiving “reams of passive-aggressive e-mails to filter through, taking shots at you, questioning your morals or ethical positions on issues of the day.”

He added it’s no wonder that people who care about their communities are discouraged from serving as elected officials.

Estabrooks also said it’s wrong for members of council to spread gossip or hearsay about their colleagues.

“It is not okay to tear your colleagues down either when in conversation with constituents or with other elected officials even with other levels of government,” he said.

“I have had these situations arise and it is alarming. This behaviour is not okay. It is not acceptable and it needs to stop.”

Estabrooks responded to an e-mail from Warktimes asking what issues prompted the harassment he had experienced, by saying he would prefer not to comment further.

Survey results

A survey conducted for the symposium by the consulting firm Strategic Steps asked 48 English-speaking locally elected officials in New Brunswick and 30 French-speaking ones if they had ever experienced any kind of abuse/harassment in the course of their council roles:

Response Category Percentage Number of Council Members
Experienced abuse or harassment 64% 50
Did NOT experience abuse or harassment 33.3% 26
Not sure 3% 2
Total 78

The elected officials were also asked how often they had experienced any type of abuse or harassment:

Frequency of Abuse or Harassment Percentage Number of Council Members
(out of 50)
Once 9.6% 5
A few times 75% 38
At least once a week 15.4% 7

More than 80% of those who had experienced abuse or harassment said it was verbal and came mainly from the public on social media or other online platforms, but just over 24% said it came from a member of council and 3.7% said it came from the mayor.

In its report, Strategic Steps says it’s difficult to manage abuse from the public partly because users of social media are able to comment anonymously and are not regulated by those online platforms.

It adds that “there is a strong undercurrent of elected officials abusing or harassing each other, which is something that is intended to be managed under the (Council) Code of Conduct, but the tools available to members of Council are often insufficient, particularly when abuse is framed as being part of political debate.”

The report points to legislation in Quebec that provides penalties for those who harass elected officials.

It says that Ontario and British Columbia also have external agencies and tribunals with the power to order compensation and other restitution for harassment of elected officials, but “the Atlantic provinces, including New Brunswick, have only basic complaint processes with little authority to hold violators accountable.”

To read the survey report, click here.

Code of conduct complaints must be dealt with in public

Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black

Mayor Black reported that during the symposium in Fredericton, the first day started by discussing harassment toward elected officials by members of the public, but on the second day the concerns shifted.

“We pretty much were only talking about harassment and incivility within our own councils, which was pretty telling,” he said.

Black said one mayor began discussing how code of conduct complaints were always dealt with behind closed doors.

Black said he stood up to say it would be better to deal with such complaints in public to give them a full airing.

“I said, it’s a real shame that we can’t do that,” whereupon, he said, a member of the new Local Governance Commission warned elected officials at the symposium that Code of Conduct complaints must be dealt with in public.

“I was shocked by that, and I think that pretty much every other single person in the room was shocked by that,” he said.

Black said the Commission, which has the power to investigate complaints and conflicts of interest, has since followed up with an advisory that states:

It has come to our attention that many local government councils are discussing and rendering decisions on code of conduct and conflict of interest complaints in closed meetings. The Commission has also viewed media reports about local governments classifying elected officials (mayors and councillors) as employees for the purposes of going into closed meetings to discuss and / or vote on alleged code of conduct by-law violations and alleged conflicts of interest provision violations. This is not permitted under section 68 of the Local Governance Act.

To read the full advisory, click here.

Posted in Town of Tantramar | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Packed meeting hears objections to proposed gas plant & a suggestion from Mayor Black on how it may be stopped

About 130 people attended a public information session at the Sackville United Church on Sunday to hear about opposition to a 500 MW gas/diesel generating plant that the U.S. company PROENERGY wants to build on the Chignecto Isthmus.

“We’re using 20th century technology to fight a 21st century problem,” Beverly Gingras, executive director of the Conservation Council of New Brunswick (CCNB) told the standing-room-only crowd.

CCNB is a member of the Protect the Chignecto Isthmus Coalition which organized the information session.

“This plant is likely going to be out of date in the next few years if you think about how fast renewables are changing and getting better, how fast batteries are changing and getting better,” Gingras said, adding that the 10 noisy jet-engine-turbines at the plant would put immense pressure on wildlife as well as water supplies.

“They are looking to take out seven million litres of  groundwater a day,” she said. “Pretty scary when we’re still in a drought.”

Gingras questioned why NB Power and its partner PROENERGY were not coming to answer community concerns.

“Why isn’t the government coming if they’re so for this?” she asked.

Big numbers

Gregor MacAskill, senior economist, Gardner Pinfold Consultants

Economist Gregor MacAskill predicted that the gas plant would be costly in both financial and environmental terms.

Using publicly available figures, MacAskill said NB Power would pay annual fees to PROENERGY of more than $50 million or $1.25 billion over 25 years, an amount equivalent to $3,400 for every New Brunswick household.

Plus, he said, NB power would pay for the fuel which at today’s prices would amount to $3.5 billion over 25 years or $9,500 per household.

He said the capital cost of grid-scale batteries with the same capacity, such as ones being developed in Ontario and Nova Scotia, would be about $1.2 billion, similar to the capital costs of the gas plant.

But there would be no fuel costs, he said.

“I just think there is a lack of creative thinking. Why not have New Brunswick Power, maybe the Energy & Utilities Board, look at alternatives?” he asked.

Environmental costs

MacAskill went on to cite PROENERGY’s figure for yearly greenhouse gas emissions: 910,800 metric tonnes.

“The federal government has what’s called the social cost of carbon,” he said, “and if I put it in 2025 dollars, it’s about $308 per tonne. It’s really supposed to reflect what we’re paying for the damages of carbon emissions.”

He said that over 25 years, the social cost of carbon would amount to $7 billion or about $19,100 per household and more than 10 times the $650 million that New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and the federal government are planning to spend to protect the Chignecto Isthmus from flooding.

“This is going to lock us into future (environmental) costs that we all end up paying,” he said.

“How crazy is that?”

Health effects

Retired family doctor Harold Popma spoke about the gas plant’s potential health effects

Harold Popma, who is a member of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE), spoke about the potential health effects of a fossil-fuel-burning gas plant.

“The World Health Organization has said that global warming is a fundamental threat to human health,” he told the audience.

“They’re calling for the rapid reduction of burning of fossil fuels and a transition to renewable energy,” he said.

“And we know what the threats are to human beings worldwide: the fires. I talked to somebody recently anecdotally about living in an area where you have smoke in the air all the time, inside and outside. Where do you go to avoid the smoke when there’s a forest fire in your neighbourhood?” he asked.

“What about heat domes? Where do you go to get cooled off when it’s 45 degrees in some places around the globe? What about food insecurity? How do we manage poverty, people who have nothing to eat because there’s no crop, there’s no water? Or there’s a flood and there’s so much water that it’s all washed away?”

Popma said the gas that would be burned in the PROENERGY plant is methane that leaks out when it’s fracked and then emits greenhouse gases when it’s burned.

“It’s sort of a double-whammy,” he said. “Forget the word natural, use the F-word,” he added as people laughed.

“Fracked! Fossil! Fuel!” he said to applause. “Pardon my French.”

Popma praised members of the Anti-Shale-Gas Alliance whom he said had done so much to stop fracking in New Brunswick.

To read CAPE’s guide for NB doctors on the health risks of gas plants, click here.

‘No man’s land’

Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black answering questions during the information session

During the question period after the presentations, Tantramar Mayor Black responded to a query about whether the town could deny permits for the gas plant because people here don’t want it.

“No, the municipality would not have to issue any permits,” he said, “and the reason for that is zoning and permitting in former local service districts is a no man’s land. The provincial government has through their (municipal) reform process recognized that land planning had to be reformed as well and they dropped the ball on it and haven’t done anything.”

Black went on to point out that the rural Centre Village site is wide open for development unlike, for example, the Sackville industrial park where the municipality would have a say under the municipal plan and the Planning Act.

“If it got to the point where they could build it, it would go to the province to pass those permits and the municipality would have no say,” he said.

‘False information’

At the same time, Black drew applause when he suggested the gas plant project could be stopped because PROENERGY does not appear to have the Indigenous support they claimed they had when they filed a description of the project with federal and provincial regulators.

“They don’t have partnership with First Nations communities. They have a partnership with the Mi’kmaq North Shore Tribal Council, which two people who have unilaterally made a decision that PROENERGY has First Nation collaboration as an equity partner (and that) is absolutely false information in my opinion.”

Black added that the nine Mi’kmaq Chiefs have expressed serious concerns about the proposed gas plant.

“To me that shows that there’s not support,” he said.

“It’s something that I pushed on PROENERGY. They gave an answer which was not an answer, so I asked them to answer it again and I still haven’t heard anything.”

The mayor went on to say that the provincial minister of energy has the authority to cancel a tender agreement if there is false information in it. He added that First Nations participation was an essential requirement for the project.

“They don’t have it. That’s my opinion and I’m just waiting to hear from PROENERGY that they actually have that and I think with whatever answer they come back with, the next push will be to the minister of energy to say ‘Well, they don’t have it, I, we, are saying that they don’t have it, so we would look to you to pull this [proposal],” he said.

“I don’t think they have it and they have falsified that information really,” Black concluded.

Posted in climate change, Environment, NB Power, New Brunswick government, Town of Tantramar | Tagged , | 7 Comments