Indigenous historian urges scrapping investments in fossil fuels

LaDonna Brave Bull Allard on Mt. A. campus

The campaign to get Mount Allison University to pull its investments from big fossil fuel companies got a boost this week from a Lakota historian who helped lead the fight against an oil pipeline in North Dakota.

LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, told about 100 people on the Mt. A. campus Wednesday night that one aim of the growing divestment movement is to take money from the big banks that finance oil and gas developments and return it to local communities.

“Right now, we are putting our money into these large banks who are investing across the world,” she said, “and I don’t know about you but I’ve been going through many communities and they are in dire straits.”

Allard urged audience members to put their money in local institutions such as credit unions.

“You know, a strong economic system is when your communities are strong,” she said. “Invest in your own communities.”

She drew applause when she mentioned New York City’s recent decision to withdraw pension fund investments from coal, oil and gas companies following similar moves in other U.S. cities including Seattle and San Francisco.

“The world is changing,” Allard said. “Everybody understands what’s happening around us. Have you looked?”

Killing the black snake

During her talk sponsored by the Mount Allison University library, Allard described the unsuccessful battle to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline from destroying graves near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation and threatening water supplies. The $3.7 billion, 1,886 kilometre pipeline was being built under the nearby Missouri River.

Allard set up the Sacred Stone Camp on her property, a camp that attracted almost 100,000 visitors in 2016 including indigenous people from all over the world.

She mentioned an ancient Lakota prophecy about a black snake that would slither across the earth poisoning the water and destroying the world, a snake that many saw as the pipeline that would be carrying 470,000 barrels of crude oil each day to an oil terminal in southern Illinois.

“When the black snake comes to devour the world, we must stand up and stop it or the world will end,” Allard said.

The fight to stop the pipeline turned into a epic battle as those calling themselves water protectors eventually faced riot police armed with automatic rifles, water cannon, mace, concussion grenades, tasers and batons. Private security firms used dogs to attack people and as the struggle wore on, hundreds were arrested and some are facing lengthy jail sentences.

Allard said she grew up as a police officer’s daughter believing in law and order.

“I no longer believe the law is just,” she said.  “I don’t know what’s happening in America.”

Student members of Divest MTA meet with LaDonna Brave Bull Allard. (L-R) Lauren Latour, Hanna Longard, Tina Oh, Louis Sobol, LaDonna, Shannon Power

Water is life

Allard painted a grim picture of what she called “Mother Earth’s revenge” for the profligate burning of fossil fuels.

“Tsunamis, typhoons, hurricanes, floods, storms,” she said, “animals going extinct everyday…why are we trying to kill ourselves?”

She added that since “water is life,” it’s impossible to live without it, yet we’re not protecting it.

She also referred to the struggle at Standing Rock.

“This is far from over,” she said, “they say LaDonna when are you done? When I dig up every pipeline from my homeland, that’s when I’m done,” she said.

“We are all in this together, there is only one Earth.”

To see the film Black Snake Killaz documenting the resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline, click here.

Posted in Environment, Mount Allison University | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Excavator digs hole in town budget

Sackville’s John Deere 2010 wheeled excavator with broken front axle

Sackville municipal officials have been scratching their heads over what to do about one of the town’s most heavily used pieces of equipment, a $300,000 excavator with a front axle that split wide open around the end of November.

Town Engineer Dwayne Acton told councillors last night that a crack had appeared in the axle’s main housing a few months earlier.

“We were able to weld it once and then it split again,” he said. “We welded it a second time and got more months out of it.”

But a third welding job failed to hold.

“It literally let go and split wide open, beyond repairs.”

Unexpected failure

Acton said the 2010 machine should last for 10 years and therefore, there’s no money in this year’s budget to replace it.

And, spending $300,000 on a new excavator could mean putting off capital projects such as reconstructing a 300-metre section of Main Street from Dufferin to Queens Road. (The town has applied for provincial funding that would cover nearly half of the project’s $850,000 cost.)

In the end, Acton and Treasurer Michael Beal are recommending that, at its meeting next Monday, council approve spending $63,250 on a new, replacement axle.

“There was one axle in all of North America that would fit our machine and it’s in Mississippi,” Acton said, adding that they could find only two used excavators on the continent that matched the make and model of Sackville’s.

“We said, ‘well maybe we can get a used axle off of another machine for this one.’ Well, the one was $95,000 to buy the used piece of equipment, $95,000 U.S….the other one was $120,000 and it was out west.”

He and Beal considered renting an excavator but that would cost $7,000 to $9,000 a month, a hefty expenditure considering that the machine is used for up to eight months every year.

They also decided that contracting out digging jobs would be even more expensive.

A hole in the budget

Treasurer Michael Beal

Treasurer Beal said he’s not sure yet where the money for a replacement axle would come from. He suggested that the town could dip into the $80,000 it’s planning to transfer this year to a long-term reserve fund that will eventually pay for upgrading its sewage lagoons.

He added that there might be savings on other capital projects, although it’s too early to tell.

In the long term, he said, it’s better for the town to replace the excavator axle now and recover some of the money when the machine is traded in or auctioned off.

“If we sell this at auction in two to three years, we may reap back $25 to $50 to $75 thousand,” Beal said, “that we could then put back into the reserve fund, if we have to do that.”

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Mt. A. students again ask university governing board to shed investments in Big Oil

Louis Sobol and Tina Oh outside Board of Regents meeting

Student activists have again urged Mount Allison’s highest governing body to join a growing worldwide movement and withdraw the university’s investments from big fossil fuel companies.

“Do the right thing, be on the right side of history,” Louis Sobol of the group Divest MTA said to members of the university’s Board of Regents during a formal presentation today.

It was the first time in Mount Allison’s 179-year history that the Board has held one of its regular meetings in public.

Sobol told the Regents that most scientists agree an additional temperature increase of two degrees Celsius would cause sea levels to rise dramatically engulfing towns like Sackville that are close to the ocean.

“If the very destruction of the land on which you sit is not enough to provoke change,” he added, “let the millions of deaths in the global south and elsewhere that have already begun to occur, dwell on your conscience.”

Costs of a changing climate

Tina Oh, who has been an organizer with Divest MTA since 2015, pointed to the widespread destruction caused by hurricanes that devastated parts of the Caribbean last summer and that forced six million people in Florida to flee their homes, the largest mass migration in U.S. history.

“Last year was the hottest year ever to be recorded,” she said, adding that it broke records set in 2016 and 2015 creating ideal conditions for forest fires in British Columbia and Portugal along with monsoons that left parts of Bangladesh, Nepal and India under water.

“This is the new reality for life on our planet,” she said.

Specific requests

Oh asked the Board to appoint a special committee to study how various investment firms would handle divesting from fossil fuels and to compile a comprehensive report analyzing long-term options and costs.

She said that as part of its work, the committee should hold a town hall at Mount Allison to gather opinions on fossil fuel divestment that would also be submitted in a report to the Board of Regents before its next meeting in May.

Oh said both reports should be made public.

Finally, she asked the Board to hold a vote during its meeting in October “to either reject or accept fossil fuel divestment of Mount Allison University’s endowment fund.”

Later, Oh said between five and seven per cent of Mt. A’s endowment fund investments are in the top 500 publicly traded fossil fuel companies. For a complete list of the university’s endowment fund holdings, click here. To read a statement about Mt. A’s endowment fund investment policies, click here.

Board of Regents chair Ron Outerbridge thanked the students for their presentation and promised he would get back to them once the Board has a chance to discuss their requests. He explained afterwards that the discussion would not be happening today, but at a later date.

Birthmark tattoos 

Shannon Power (R) gets birthmark number 360 from tattoo artist Lou Van Aardt

After their presentation, the students adjourned to the student centre foyer outside the Board meeting where they staged a demonstration to call attention to the steadily rising levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Several students got tattoos showing the number in parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in the year they were born.

Shannon Power was born in 1995 when the level had reached 360 ppm, above the 350 ppm that some scientists consider a safe level. (That level was exceeded in 1988.)

Power said students of her generation have never known a time when climate change was not a threat to life on the planet.

Her words echoed Tina Oh’s earlier ones to the Board of Regents.

“The young people who are currently in this room were already born into a dying world,” she said.

“For young people,” Oh added, “climate change has always been the most pressing issue.”

For a report showing how Divest MTA fits into the campaign on campuses across Canada for fossil fuel divestment, click here.

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Economics professor predicts NB will lose money selling pot

University of Regina Economics Professor Jason Childs has studied the legalization of cannabis

An economics professor startled participants in a seminar at Mount Allison University on Friday when he pulled a $50 bill from his wallet and offered it to anyone who could get him one gram of marijuana within an hour.

A few hands went up when Professor Jason Childs from the University of Regina asked how many students or faculty members could meet that challenge and at least a couple of hands were raised when Childs asked who could buy him that gram within half an hour.

Childs was making the point that cannabis is readily available in Canada even though it will remain an illegal recreational drug at least until July.

“Anybody who wants it can get it now,” he said, adding studies show that 20 per cent of Canadians “are regular consumers of this illegal product.”

Illicit market won’t go away

Childs, who is one of the authors of an academic study on legalizing cannabis in Canada, predicts that the well-entrenched illicit market will pose a tough challenge for the provinces and territories that will begin overseeing sales of marijuana after the drug is legalized this summer.

The New Brunswick government has announced that legal cannabis will be available in up to 20 stand-alone stores run by NB Liquor in 15 communities across the province including Sackville. The stores will operate under the name CannabisNB.

“I don’t think the New Brunswick system is going to displace the illicit market,” Childs said. “One year from now my prediction is the illegal market will be happy and healthy.”

Price of pot a crucial factor

Although New Brunswick has yet to announce how much recreational cannabis will cost, Childs figures the government plans to sell it for $10 a gram after paying half that to acquire 13,000 kilograms each year from three suppliers.

He said the current price on the illicit market is about $6 per gram and while customers will probably be willing to pay more for high quality, safe cannabis, he doubts they would pay 40 per cent more.

“The illicit market is not going to disappear anytime soon,” he said, “and displacing it will be central to long-term success.”

Losing money selling drugs

Childs added that after factoring in labour and overhead costs and sharing tax revenues with the federal government, marijuana sales will be far from the golden goose that many politicians had hoped.

“I think it’s very, very likely the New Brunswick government will lose money selling drugs,” Childs said as seminar participants chuckled.

He added that the government may have to lower prices to compete, taking losses in a long-term effort to destroy the illicit market.

Childs said New Brunswick should have licensed a limited number of private stores to sell cannabis as Alberta is doing.

He argues that private retailers have more incentive than government-run stores to compete with the illicit market by keeping prices down and ensuring quality and variety.

“I’m very comfortable saying New Brunswick got it wrong. It’s going to go badly,” he said. “That’s not the way to run a business.”

Posted in Mount Allison University, New Brunswick government | Tagged | 2 Comments

Be prepared, flood risk workshop hears extreme weather is here to stay

Serge Dupuis, civil engineering professor, Université de Moncton

“Don’t be scared, be prepared,” Serge Dupuis told an audience of about 40 people in Sackville on Saturday.

The professor of civil engineering at Université de Moncton was addressing a workshop on reducing flood risk in an era of climate change and extreme weather.

Dupuis also quoted the old G.I. Joe slogan, “Now that you know, knowing is half the battle.”

It was a quick way of summing up one main message of the workshop that was jointly sponsored by his university, the town of Sackville and three environmental groups, Ducks Unlimited Canada, Nature NB and EOS Eco-Energy.

Changing climate

Dupuis said professional engineers like him are starting to use the term “a  changing climate” instead of “climate change” when they’re talking about the need to adapt to more frequent extreme weather conditions. It’s a way of avoiding arguments over whether climate change is real, he added.

“Most people would say the climate is changing.” Dupuis said. “We’re seeing things that we’ve never seen before.”

Tweet from NB Emergency Measures Organization

He gave a recent example to prove his point — a two-day spate of extreme rainfall accompanied by all-time record high temperatures in Moncton and vicinity on January 12th and 13th.

Dupuis projected a slide showing that on January 12, temperatures reached a high of 14.3 degrees topping the previous record of 11.2 degrees in 2014.

On January 13, the temperature hit 16.7 degrees way above the 12.2 degree record set in 1972. And, 25.1 millimetres of rain fell topping the previous record of 10.2 millimetres in 1956.

As CBC reported, other parts of New Brunswick were hit with even more rain washing out roads, flooding homes and causing power blackouts.

Then on January 14, the temperature in Moncton abruptly fell to 15.2 degrees below zero turning streets and sidewalks into skating rinks.

Inland flooding

Later during an interview, Dupuis said that such rapid fluctuations in temperature, combined with heavy rainfall, increases the flood risk for homeowners.

“If you have a nice little drainage ditch in your backyard which works great in the summer or fall, but as soon as you put a blanket of two feet of snow and it freezes up, then the rain just runs off the snow and might get to your home a lot quicker and easier where it never did before,” he said.

Who’s at risk?

Amanda Marlin of EOS Eco-Energy

Amanda Marlin, executive director of EOS Eco-Energy, asked workshop participants a rhetorical question: Who is at risk of inland flooding?

Her answer was a short one: Everyone.

“You don’t need to live close to a brook or a lake,” she said. “You can still be stranded by washed-out roads or municipal sewage can back up into your home.”

She said that she and her family live on high ground in Frosty Hollow yet still had to deal with water coming into their home.

“If the drain leading from your drain tiles gets plugged on the bottom like ours was, then the water’s going to back up and find its way in,” she said during an interview. “It going to go to the easiest spot it can find. If you have a crack in your foundation, it can find its way in.”

Rain garden 

Red Cross Emergency Kit Contents (click to enlarge)

Marlin gave a variety of tips for avoiding flood damage including storing important items and hazardous materials up high as well as elevating furnaces, hot water heaters and fuel tanks.

She discussed the need for emergency kits as well as for food supplies and other basic items such as medicines, toilet paper and clothing, $200 in small bills, and coins for pay phones (if you can find one).

Marlin also suggested installing a water alarm in the basement, clearing snow away from around the home and making sure downspouts are at least six feet away from the foundation.

She said it would be a good idea to replace lawns near downspouts or driveways with a rain garden.

“You dig down a bit and you plant native grasses, plants, ferns, sedges and those plants are able to drink up a lot of water,” she said. “Those rain gardens just help to slow the flow of rainwater or stormwater and let it absorb naturally into the ground.”

Marlin added that rain gardens absorb 30 to 4o per cent more water than ordinary lawns.

She said that so far, EOS has planted nine of them across the region including ones in Memramcook, Dorchester, Sackville and Port Elgin.

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Would-be Mt. A. president quizzed on university investments in fossil fuels

Jean-Paul Boudreau answering students’ questions Monday in Gracie’s

The sole candidate to become the next president of Mount Allison University faced what he acknowledged were “tough questions” Monday as he talked with dozens of students on campus during a pizza lunch in Gracie’s Café.

Jean-Paul Boudreau, who teaches psychology at Ryerson University in Toronto, told the students he was wearing his Teflon jacket as he prepared to answer their questions.

When Shannon Power asked him what he would do to support students campaigning to get Mount Allison to scrap its investments in fossil fuels, Boudreau said he was fully aware of the issue in general, but didn’t know the specifics of Mt. A’s investment portfolio.

He said that as president, he would listen to students. In reply to similar questions about giving students a greater voice in running the university and helping them campaign for social justice, he added “I’m the kind of person who would like to have a conversation and dialogue…We’re in this together…I just want to hear what’s on your mind.”

Louis Sobol wondered what Boudreau would do if 50 students and 10 professors campaigning for an end to fossil fuel investments stormed Centennial Hall, barricading him in his office, a tongue-in-cheek reference to last year’s five-hour occupation of the administration building after the current president, Robert Campbell, refused to engage with students on the university’s investment policies.

“I’m not saying that kind of activism is wrong,” Boudreau replied. “I’m saying there’s a place for dialogue…before we get to locking me in my office.”

‘I love my students’

Earlier, when asked why he would leave Ryerson to come back to his Acadian roots in New Brunswick, Boudreau drew chuckles when he said, “I haven’t left Ryerson yet. I love my job. I love what I do and I love my students.”

He added, however, that he would be gaining a whole new family if he becomes Mount Allison’s 15th president, but cautioned later that he’s just a candidate for the job and that his employers at Ryerson don’t know he’s seeking it.

He then urged students to keep his visit confidential and not to broadcast it on their social media feeds.

Boudreau’s lively meeting with the students was one of several sessions he held with university administrators, professors and staff, during which he outlined general ideas for everything from mapping the university’s future, supporting scholarship, research and creativity, and attracting more students.

“I would like to be your champion as we collectively advance,” Boudreau declared Monday morning during the first of three meetings with faculty, staff and students.

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King St. residents say no to more student housing

Pat Sheppard addressing council during public hearing last Monday

Sackville Town Council voted on Monday to delay considering a rezoning application that would allow more student housing on King Street after several neighbours complained about noise, garbage, excessive traffic and outdoor fires.

“It used to be a nice street to live on, but it’s not any more,” Pat Sheppard told councillors during a public hearing last Monday.

Sheppard, who lives at 46 King Street next to a student housing building, said she loses sleep some nights because of the noise.

“They’ve had a few parties back there where the parking lot was packed with vehicles and the police had to come and break it up,” she added.

Sheppard was one of four residents who spoke against a rezoning application that would enable property owner Sean Doucet to add another apartment building at 40 King Street.

The new, three-storey building would contain six rental units. There are already six units on the 1.5 acre property, one in a dwelling that fronts on King Street and five more in an apartment building behind it. Doucet also owns a one unit building next door at 42 King Street.

Reg Hanson, who lives across the street at 39 King, told councillors that at times he’s watched hundreds of students pouring out of the residences.

“I’ve seen this summer and this fall, five squad cars in there trying to control some things,” Hanson said adding, “We as taxpayers are paying for this extra policing.”

Existing 5-unit building at 40 King. The owner is proposing to add a 6 unit building on the property which is heavily sloped at the back

Margaret Hanson complained about the number of students living on the properties. Each of the six rental units at 40 King Street has five bedrooms.

“There is already 31 students on lot 40,” she said. “How many more students can we accommodate on that lot?”

Hanson also mentioned outdoor fires in spring and fall with no fire boxes to contain them.

Environmental questions 

“I wonder if there’s really been any environmental studies studies done on this place,” said Norm Cole of Pringle Street referring to part of the property at 40 King that borders on the Sackville Cemetery and a fast-flowing stream.

Cole pointed out that the back of the lot is heavily sloped.

“This land does not exist as we speak, as far as usable land. It’s all over a bank,” he added.

Design meets town requirements

Town planner Lori Bickford

Town planner Lori Bickford told council that the proposed design for the new six-unit building meets town requirements given the size of the lot and the amount of land that is vacant.

She also pointed out that the proposal fits in with the Municipal Plan which encourages a wide range of housing options, directs high-density development to main roads such as King Street and also meets the town’s target for increasing the development of multi-unit buildings.

However, she recommended that the town impose conditions to ensure that the lot would have no more than 12 units; that there be access for fire trucks off Bowser Street and that a licensed engineer devise a plan to manage storm water.

Councillors vote for delay

After the public hearing, several councillors expressed concern about the rezoning proposal.

“It’s a residential area and it’s supposed to be a nice mingling of apartments and residential houses,” said Councillor Michael Tower.

He added that the town seems to be moving away from encouraging more single-family homes instead of apartment buildings and he also expressed worries about increased traffic.

Councillor Bruce Phinney moved motion for delay

“King Street is a nightmare for us right now,” Tower said. “It’s going to cost the town as it is right now to try to find a way to alleviate the issue on that street and now we’re going to add more to it. I think we’re looking at more trouble.”

Councillor Bruce Phinney, who proposed a successful motion to delay consideration of the rezoning application until next month, said he needed more time to look at the property, check with the fire department about safety, confer with the police about what’s been going on there and talk to local residents.

Not going to ruffle feathers

Meantime, property owner Sean Doucet, who did not attend the council meeting, says he hadn’t heard any complaints from residents about such issues as traffic and noise.

During a telephone interview, Doucet said he wanted to construct the new six-unit building on the property at 40 King because he doesn’t have any two-bedroom apartments, only five bedroom ones. He said some students prefer two-bedroom units and that building them would help the town.

“At the end of the day, it helps with the tax base in Sackville, it creates jobs, it creates sales for hardware companies while it’s being built,” he said, adding however, that he doesn’t want to get into an argument with the neighbours and that he realizes students do have a reputation for being louder.

“I’m not going to ruffle any feathers. If people are that upset about a new development, I just won’t go ahead and do it,” he said. “I’ll move on to something else.”

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Acadian Jean-Paul Boudreau in line to become 15th Mt. A. president

Dr. Jean-Paul Boudreau’s Twitter photo @Boudreau_Ideas

Dr. Jean-Paul Boudreau, who teaches in the psychology department at Ryerson University in Toronto, is the finalist candidate in the search for a new president at Mount Allison University.

Boudreau has been invited to visit the Mt. A. campus on Monday to talk to students, faculty, staff and members of the public who will be given a chance to comment on his candidacy.

The university’s governing body, the Board of Regents, is expected to decide in February whether to appoint him to succeed Robert Campbell whose current term as president expires on June 30th.

One finalist candidate

After a search that began more than nine months ago, a university committee invited two final candidates to visit campus this month.

But a note on the university’s website says that the other one withdrew and after reconsidering the list of qualified candidates who had previously been interviewed, the search committee decided to invite Boudreau to campus as the only finalist.

Boudreau’s background

His online biography says Boudreau served as chair of Ryerson’s Department of Psychology (2003 – 2011), and Dean of the Faculty of Arts (2011 – 2016) before his appointment in 2016 as Special Advisor and Executive Lead for Social Innovation at Ryerson University.

The biography also calls him “a proud Acadian with strong Maritime roots.”

Boudreau’s psychological research concerns the learning and development of infants and he is director of Ryerson’s Children, Health, Infancy, Learning and Development (CHILD) lab.

“Awesome” teacher

Jean-Paul Boudreau, Ryerson photo

The website Rate My Professors, which allows students to make anonymous comments, indicates Boudreau is a popular teacher with 21 students of the 24 who assessed him giving him an “awesome” rating. He’s described as caring, approachable and supportive:

Dr. Boudreau is a great professor who goes out of his way to help his students, giving his time and attention. I learned professional development skills that will always be useful. He gave practical advice and helpful feedback. He placed me with a lab that allowed me to get valuable experience. I learned a lot and am glad I had him as a professor.

Dr Boudreau is a wonderful professor who is incredibly passionate. Dr Boudreau is extremely helpful and willing to take the time to listen to students and answer any questions. Dr Boudreau provides his students with a valuable experience that they will use beyond school well into their professional careers. Highly recommended.

this is one odd duck BUT he cares a lot about his student’s success. If u show up, ask questions and do your readings, u will get B+ or A- easy, the exams are based on UNDERSTANDING the stuff not MEMORIZING it so if u don’t get something ask, he will answer until you get it. He is very helpful with assignments but u still have to put in the effort.

NOTE: Reached by phone at his office in Toronto on Wednesday afternoon, Boudreau said he was in the middle of a meeting, but promised to call me back later. However, he did not return my call or respond to an e-mail and after waiting more than five hours, I decided to publish this piece.

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Sackville councillors raise property taxes to close budget gap

Councillor Andrew Black

Property taxes will be going up in Sackville this year after a majority of town councillors voted Monday to approve a one cent hike in residential rates and a one-and-a-half cent increase for businesses.

The new rate of $1.56 per $100 of assessed value will mean that taxes will go up on a home valued at $100,000 by $10 this year, while a business with a similar assessment will pay $15 more.

Six councillors voted in favour of raising taxes to close a budget shortfall of about $60,000 after the province reduced the town’s tax base by $9.2 million.

Councillors Andrew Black and Bruce Phinney voted against the tax hike.

Phinney said that a lot of people could not afford even a small increase in property taxes while Black said raising municipal taxes on businesses goes against the town’s goal of strengthening existing businesses while attracting new ones.

“Sackville has been dealt a bad hand,” Black said during a council debate that lasted about 12 minutes.

“There is no reason to increase taxes to compensate, but rather cut spending to make ends meet, which is what most Sackvillians would do with their own personal budgets,” he added.

Black argued that council could delay some of this year’s capital spending to make up for the $60,000 in lost revenue.

Councillor Bill Evans

Councillor Bill Evans, who voted for the tax increase, responded that delaying spending wouldn’t help because a permanent reduction in the town’s tax base will mean continuing budget shortfalls in coming years.

“This is not a one-time problem,” Evans said. “If we don’t raise taxes now, the deficit that we face next year without the additional funding will be even greater and so, I don’t think that is an effective way to deal with the problem that we are faced with,” he added.

Maintain services and town assets

Deputy Mayor Ron Aiken and Councillor Joyce O’Neil, who both voted for the tax increases, said that while no one likes to see taxes go up, the town must continue to maintain its capital assets and its services.

I’ve heard a lot of people say that they’ve come to our town because they enjoy our services and that we’re doing a super job on that,” O’Neil said. “So to turn around and cut those, what are we accomplishing there?

Councillors Megan Mitton and Michael Tower also favoured increasing taxes to maintain services and capital investments. Tower argued that the town has spent its money wisely on such projects as improvements to Bridge and Lorne Streets as well as on the downtown park in memory of Bill Johnstone.

“I’m still unsure about what I am going to do here,” said Councillor Allison Butcher. “I’m struggling with this a lot,” she added. “If this was my personal issue having spent too much or thought I had to, I would cut something back.”

But when the vote came a few minutes later, Butcher sided with the five councillors who favoured raising taxes.

Capital spending

Old Sackville Quarry near the Mt. A. campus

Meantime, town council approved $950,000 in capital spending at Monday’s meeting with only Councillor Phinney opposed.

“Here we are raising taxes,” Phinney said, adding that at the same time, the town is committing itself to $25,000 in spending for a Beech Hill dog park; $25,000 for the establishment of new recreational trails and $200,000 for a project in the old Sackville Quarry that would combine a park with water retention facilities designed to alleviate downtown flooding. (The town has applied for a $1 million federal grant to help pay for the Quarry Project. The grant is administered by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities under its Climate Innovation Program.)

To view the list of 2018 town capital projects, click here.

To read previous coverage of the town’s budget shortfall, click here.

Posted in Town of Sackville | Tagged , , | 8 Comments

Ambitious plans for expansion of Sackville Waterfowl Park on its 30th anniversary

The Town of Sackville is planning two big extensions to its 55-acre Waterfowl Park this year as the park turns 30.

At his New Year’s levee last Monday, Mayor John Higham talked about the town acquiring a “significant portion of land” that is adjacent to the park.

Later, during an interview, he added: “It’s going to give us an opportunity to show broader elements of how waterfowl work [along with] other species in the area.”

Higham would not specify exactly where the land is except to say that it is a bequest that has been held up for various legal and technical reasons that have now been largely resolved.

The mayor said he expects the details to be announced fairly soon once the deal is complete.

Lund bequest

The Lund bequest of nearly 20 acres, next to the Waterfowl Park, lies between the TransCanada Highway and the homes on Princess St. bounded on the northwest by the TransCanada Trail and on the southeast by Squire St.

A Warktimes search of New Brunswick property records combined with other information reveals that the property in question was willed to the town by Daniel Lund who died in November 2013.

It consists of nearly 20 acres of marshy and wooded land that is bounded by the TransCanada Trail, the TransCanada Highway and Squire Street. (An additional seven acre parcel, not shown on the map, lies on the other side of the TransCanada Highway.)

Daniel Lund’s funeral home obituary noted that in his last year, “he worked on his plan for a final gift to the community of Sackville and died confident that it would come to pass even if he would not be there to celebrate it.”

Additional expansion

Diagram showing pond one south of Bridge St, two south of St. James St. and three south of the CN Rail line. (Click map to enlarge)

In his New Year’s address, Mayor Higham also mentioned the town’s plan to link the southerly portion of the Waterfowl Park with water retention ponds that are being proposed as part of the Lorne Street flood control project. (To read earlier coverage of this project, click here.)

Higham said the town is hoping to encourage visitors to the Waterfowl Park to come into the downtown.

“Where the TransCanada Trail comes out now onto Weldon Street, it’s only a short walk over to the Lorne Street trail,” he said, adding that if the flood control project receives environmental approval, people would be able to hike on trails in the areas around the ponds near Lorne and St. James Streets and the CN Railway tracks.

Warktimes has learned that the town is currently in the process of buying land from the proprietors of the Black Duck Café and the Marshlands Inn for a waterfowl pond east of Lorne Street and north of St. James. (It is shown on the map as Pond No. 1, south of Bridge Street.)

Town engineer Dwayne Acton told a public meeting in November that the town hopes Ducks Unlimited will construct and pay for that pond as an extension of the Waterfowl Park.

Waterfowl Park’s beginnings

Sandy Burnett, Chair, Sackville Waterfowl Park Advisory Committee

During an interview on Friday, Sandy Burnett, Chair of the Sackville Waterfowl Park Advisory Committee smiled as he remembered how a landscape design consultant from Sussex “appropriately named Jim Sackville,” first proposed a wetlands park in the 1980s.

“The town had commissioned a strategic plan for branding the town,” Burnett said.

“Jim Sackville suggested choosing a waterfowl theme and converting a tract of wet pasture into a nature park.”

Burnett recalled that the mayor and town council at the time were skeptical of the park proposal, but he and fellow enthusiasts Al Smith and Paul Bogaard managed to recruit support from various bodies including the Canadian Wildlife Service, the Chignecto Naturalists’ Club and Ducks Unlimited Canada.

“Council said, ‘if you can find the money, see what you can do,'” Burnett said.

Half of the land was leased to the town by Mount Allison University with the other half acquired from private owners including the Doncaster family.

Ducks Unlimited began construction in 1987 and the volunteer group presented town council with a Draft Management Plan in June 1988, the year the Waterfowl Park finally opened.

Thirty years later, Burnett is clearly pleased with how things have turned out.

“It began with a vision of bringing the natural world into the heart of Sackville,” Burnett says.

“The result is a productive habitat for wildlife, an attractive destination for visitors, and a wonderful recreational resource for the town,” he adds.

“It’s a win in every way.”

Posted in Environment, Mount Allison University, Town of Sackville | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Province says no to Sackville’s request for $60k to avoid property tax hike

Mayor Higham with poet laureate Marilyn Lerch at New Year’s levee

Mayor John Higham says the New Brunswick government has refused his request for nearly $60,000 to make up for its decision to reduce Sackville’s 2018 municipal tax base by $9.2 million.

During a speech today during his annual New Year’s levee at Town Hall, the mayor added that council will now have to decide whether to make up the budget shortfall by further reductions to the town’s budget or by raising property taxes.

“That will be the question,” Higham said during an interview later, “and someone on  council will make a motion for one way or the other and we’ll see how everybody votes.”

During a special budget meeting in November, all seven councillors who were present favoured closing the budget gap with small tax increases that would see residential rates go up by one cent to $1.56 per $100 of assessment and commercial rates rise by one-and-a-half cents to $4.545 per $100 of assessment.

Councillors are expected to discuss how to eliminate the budget shortfall at their next meeting on January 8th.

Higham says the province has agreed to discuss other changes that could improve Sackville’s financial outlook such as including Mount Allison’s student population in the calculations for provincial equalization support; fuller recovery of the costs when Sackville’s firefighters and police respond to emergencies on the TransCanada Highway; and, more compensation for the fire protection that Sackville provides to residents of local service districts outside its boundaries.

Mayor hopeful about Moloney Electric

Moloney Electric building on Bridge St.

Meantime, Higham says he’s hoping to hear soon about whether an Ontario-based company with  additional plants in Alberta and British Columbia will be able to buy Sackville’s Moloney Electric building to produce electrical transformers here.

About 60 workers lost their jobs when Moloney Electric shut down in 2016.

The mayor says Cam Tran, a family-owned company with headquarters near Peterborough, Ontario, has submitted an offer to buy the building and is expecting to receive an answer from the bankruptcy manager this month.

“They see this as the perfect addition to their national network,” Higham says adding the company wants to make significant capital investments here.

“They like the location, they like the skilled labour and they like the potential for sales both in the Maritimes and in export,” he says.

Poet Laureate pats town’s back

A highlight of today’s mayor’s levee was poet laureate Marilyn Lerch’s performance of “It’s Time To Pat Our Town’s Back & This Homely Poem Will Do Just That.”

Among other things, her poem praised Sackville residents for supporting the local hospital as well as the volunteers who are trying to improve the town’s schools with “their 20-20 vision.”

Lerch drew laughter and applause when she ended by flagging one of last year’s notable achievements:

Last but not least, as we shout hear, hear

There’s one thing about which we all can rave

After all those bumpy, rutted, flooded years,

Finally,                 we got Lorne Street paved.

To listen to Marilyn Lerch’s poem, which she read again later for The New Wark Times, click to start the player below.

Posted in Town of Sackville | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments