Friday, 9 June 2023

Northern N.B. town declares French as sole official language after review

 
 
 

Northern N.B. town declares French as sole official language after review

Belle-Baie says it plans to also communicate health and safety information in English

Belle-Baie, a newly formed town, launched a review into its language policy after concerns were raised over public notices published only in French.

The majority-francophone community was created on Jan. 1, when Beresford, Petit-Rocher, Nigadoo and Pointe-Verte were merged as part of local governance reform.

On Thursday, the town released a draft of its language policy to the public. It declares French as the official language of Belle-Baie, but notes it will make exceptions for public notices for health and safety issues.

Mayor Daniel Guitard said any resident will still be able to request all services in English.

"We wanted to have the best possible policy showing that we're a French community. But we wanted to be reasonable with our anglophone friends," he said. 

        "We're not a bilingual community, we're a French community. But we will provide services to citizens in English if they require it to be in English, in certain circumstances.

- Mayor Daniel Guitard

The draft policy states that all oral and written communications from the municipality, including public notices, information documents, social media posts and the town's website will be solely in French. It also says the working language of government will be French. Public notices will be bilingual when it concerns health or public safety.

Belle-Baie's residents are 92 per cent francophone, so the town has no obligation to provide bilingual services.

Under New Brunswick's Official Languages Act, only a municipality whose official language minority population reaches at least 20 per cent is required to offer services in both English and French. Cities are also required to provide bilingual services.

'Very unwelcoming'

Before the creation of Belle-Baie, the former Town of Beresford published public notices in both official languages as a courtesy to English-speaking residents. In the 2021 census, 17.5 per cent of Beresford residents reported English as their first language, putting it just short of the 20 per cent threshold. Out of the 650 anglophones, 305 reported knowledge of English only.

Ashley Aube, an anglophone resident of Beresford for 15 years, said people first started raising concerns about French-only notices after a boil-water advisory was posted only in French. She said the warning was for an area adjacent to a daycare for anglophone children.

"It was always in French and English, even the town sign was in French and English," she said of services before the merger. "I don't know why when we became Belle-Baie that all of a sudden it had to become a French community."

A portrait photo of a woman. Ashley Aube says she's concerned anglophone residents of Belle-Baie could miss important notices from the municipality. (Zoom/CBC)

Aube, who grew up in Ontario, said she speaks basic French but does not consider herself to be fully bilingual. She's concerned unilingual anglophones will be left out of cultural, recreational and community activities.

"Just assuming that they would understand French, to me, is very unwelcoming," she said.

In February, New Brunswick's Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages confirmed it had received complaints about the language policy in Belle-Baie.

Aube said she understands the desire to protect the French language, but said excluding an entire group of citizens from public notices is not the right approach.

Policy promotes French, mayor says

Guitard said Belle-Baie's transition committee, which was created to work on the amalgamation, decided the new municipality would operate in French given its linguistic composition. 

He said after launching a review of the policy, a committee of councillors consulted with experts, politicians and the province's Commissioner of Official Languages.

The municipality is currently serving residents in both official languages at its office and is personally communicating with individual residents in English when requested. Public notices and Facebook posts have only been made in French.

Guitard said anglophone residents will also be able to make presentations before council or ask questions in English. He said places like Belle-Baie are important for the francophone and Acadian linguistic minority community in New Brunswick.

He said his town accepts anglophones with "open arms" and will strive to offer quality services in English when requested. He said the "vast majority" of citizens he consulted with told him it was important to protect the French nature of the community.

"We had to come up with rules to make sure we serve our population, but we promote the French side of our community," he said.

"We're not a bilingual community, we're a French community. But we will provide services to citizens in English if they require it to be in English, in certain circumstances."

Belle-Baie will hear feedback on the draft policy at a public meeting on Tuesday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


 
Alexandre Silberman

Video journalist

Alexandre Silberman is a video journalist with CBC News based in Moncton. He has previously worked at CBC Fredericton, Power & Politics, and Marketplace. You can reach him by email at: alexandre.silberman@cbc.ca

 
 
 
183 Comments 



David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Methinks Mayor Daniel Guitard swore an oath to our British King to uphold the Charter N'esy Pas?  



David Amos
What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander 
 
 
Wendy Simon
Reply to David Amos
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Amos
I concur. 
 
 
 
 
Janice small  
I'm fluent in French and English and I am shocked and just not sure if this is a publicity stunt to get the mayor and his " newly formed town " some media coverage or just a really unfortunate knee jerk decision by Belle-Baie and council.Tourist season is upon us and do you really thing an English family will stop in Belle-Baie for lunch or book a motel or a B & B. With media coverage like this you sure are not making English tourist welcome.

If I were a small business in Belle-Baie trying to make ends meet and survive in today's world I would be very very upset with my " newly formed town "

Now just imagine if a town or city in NB with a large percentage of english voted to go English as the solo language.The Acadian Society of NB would be all over this as unfair, unjust, against my rights ,,,,on and on it goes..

The optics look terrible here so take a step back admit the mistake and chalk it up to being a " newly formed town " and welcome the english speaking people to your beautiful area instead of fueling the divide and keeping english out of your area..

 
David Amos 
Reply to Janice small 
Where is HON. DANIEL ALLAIN when we need him??? 
 
 
 
 
Tom Williamson 
Similar to the city of Dieppe publicly stating that they are not a bilingual city. Stating that they are a francophone city . One would think that in an official bilingual province that cities, Towns and municipals would not have the right to self declare themselves a French only city and municipalities and go against the official bilingualism status of New Brunswick. Can’t wait to see Evan happens when the majority of New Brunswick start self designating themselves English only areas of the province.  
 
 
David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Tom Williamson 
Dream on
 
 
 
 
Blair Churchill  
and so that should be the policy of all English communities in NB, "we will provide services to citizens in French IF they require it to be in French, in "certain circumstances"." 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Blair Churchill  
SNB is everywhere and they are mandated to be bilingual  
 
 
 
 
G. Timothy Walton
Somebody's nickel-and-diming at the municipal office. 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to G. Timothy Walton 
Par for the course  
 
 
 
 
Keith Greenhalgh  
sounds like Quebec in the 70's and the inception of Bill 101. Those that do not remember history are forever bound to repeat it.  
 
 
Dan Lee
Reply to Keith Greenhalgh 
You havent been watching Higgs then in the last 3 years 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Keith Greenhalgh  
That dumb move cost Quebec a lot of Business HQs 
 
 
 
 
Charles-Thierry Baillergeon   
Don't recall receiving any services in French from my anglophone city.

Provincial and Federal services yes, municipal, no.


Graham McCormack 
Reply to Charles-Thierry Baillergeon  
Which city would that be? 
 
 
David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Charles-Thierry Baillergeon  
Has the cat got your tongue? 
 
 
 
 
 
Michael Collins 
This is a sad day in the effort to unite the two main linguistic communities in this province. Hopefully this major and those that support him realize that they are making a grave error and rescind this policy. 
 
 
Russell Pastuch
Reply to Michael Collins 
We'll still drive through on our way to Newfie and grab a slice of Rappie Pie :-0  
 
David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Russell Pastuch 
Do Newfies speak Chiac? 


David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Russell Pastuch 
Belle-Baie is not along the way 
 
 


 
Sandra Michaud 
Content Deactivated 
 Imagine if the Anglophone's did this in there communities, say Perth, Plaster Rock, Woodstock the list could go on and on. They would be attacked for even thinking about it. The money that is wasted on having separate Hospitals, Schools, Busing alone is ridiculous , and then everyone wonders why our province is so poor......  
 
 
Al Clark
Reply to Sandra Michaud  
Plurals don't use apostrophes.

Of there, their, and they're, the correct word would be their, there.

Those communities send out french notices now, do they??

No good reason for cors to make up a french screen name.

 
David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Al Clark 
YO Inspector Clouseau say Hey to your Chief Trudeau for me will ya? 


 
Russell Pastuch 
Works for me. Goose and Gander. 
 
 
 
Matt Titanium 
Who cares. Not like folks are flocking to this backwater place in masses. A mere speck in the grand scheme of things.  
 
 
Russell Pastuch
Reply to Matt Titanium
Principle.

I, as a resident of Ottawa, am a second class citizen because I wasn't born French and never really learned it being from that great French bastian of Winterpeg. You can blather in broken English, fine, but if you as an Anglo try and speak French, you better be able to pass a Parisian exam. Great people, by the way !

 

Russell Pastuch

Manager, Electronics Systems Research at Correctional Service of Canada

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

 
 
Russell Pastuch  
It makes perfect sense to me.

Next step, a census of all towns/cities west of Quebec. More than 50% Anglo, make English the official language and reduce French services.

And I HAVE to be bilingual. The tail wags the dog.

 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Russell Pastuch
The French language services in Dieppe are not the same as those in McAdam. French services are already reduced or not existent in places like McAdam.  
 
 
Russell Pastuch
Reply to Mathieu Laperriere 
I worked for the Feds. At the time it cost $100/page to have things translated into French. What we got back was so bad in some cases that the Francophones used the original English version. 


Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Russell Pastuch
Sounds about right. We're the francophones compensated for using that extra skill set?
 
 
Russell Pastuch
Reply to Mathieu Laperriere  
The way AI is developing, we will soon have Babble Fish in our ears. I mean we even used Google translate when we were in Japan. Not perfect but good enough to get by.  
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Mathieu Laperriere
*Were  
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Russell Pastuch 
Remember the game of telephone as a kid? Each time another person or gadget is included in the string of conversation there is a chance that part of the original message is lost.  
 
 
 
 
 
Graeme Scott  
What a crazy set of rules. A French town or village can unilaterally declare itself French only but an English city like Saint John must be bilingual. Did the SANB dictate the rules to government when the were written?
 
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Graeme Scott 
Everybody knows SANB loves to dictate the rules when it suits their agenda 
 
 
jtallain1029 
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Graeme Scott  
If we weren't a bilingual province, it would definitely be different...Edmundston, Saint John, Fredericton, Moncton, Dieppe, Miramichi, Bathurst and Campbellton MUST be bilingual. Tide Head, Atholville, Dalhousie, Eer River Crossing, Charlo, Richibucto, Rexton and Shediac MUST be bilingual. Any other place with a minority language at 20% or more MUST be bilingual. 
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere 
Reply to Graeme Scott 
Is SJ actually officially bilingual? 
 
 
Ray Skavinsky
Reply to Mathieu Laperriere   
No..moncton is..not sure of Fred...I stand to be corrected however
 
 
 

 
Chris Merriam  
"But we wanted to be reasonable with our anglophone friends"...nothing says friendship like division and exclusion.  
 
 
Matt Titanium 
Reply to Chris Merriam
Yup lol  
 
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Chris Merriam 
I doubt the Mayor has any anglophone friends 
 
 
 
 
Marc Bourque  
It’s all about fairness. Daniel had no problem taking my money when he use to sell ATV’s I have zero respect for that man now. My first language is French Although iam French iam also fighting for the English speaking population for their rights also.Can’t say how many would do the same for me! It’s all about fairness and equality. Daniel is a liberal, you know those who wants everyone to be treated equally. LOL LOL Daniel you’ve done burnt your bridge!! 
 
 
Dan Armitage 
Reply to Marc Bourque  
Well said Marc and as we should fight for yours as well!
 
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Marc Bourque  
When did he sell ATVs?
 
 
Marc Bourque  
Reply to Dan Armitage  
Thank you 😊
 
 
 
 
pat rice 
New Brunswick was very very reluctant and the last province to allow the teaching of French in 1977. Only after Ottawa forced them to, ahead of the 1980 referendum, so they could pretend Canadians love French, even though they did everything to erase it from their territory since they arrived from Europe. New Brunswick claim as the only bilingual province is a cloud of smoke, an illusion. A lie. I don’t know a single person born in an English household that can hold a conversation in French. That would be zero.
 
 
Toby Tolly  
Reply to pat rice   
1977

before that no french was taught?

lmao

 
David Amos   
Reply to pat rice
I studied French in New Brunswick in the sixties 
 
 
Al Clark
Reply to pat rice
sounds like a rogan "nugget" !

"what if i told you....."

 
 
 
Fred Garrett 
I thought New Brunswick had two official languages and that fact is in the preamble of the Canadian Charter. It seems to me that mainly english speaking communities were force to provide all services in both official languages and they were force to by the province, often citing the Charter. Perhaps this was a discussion that needed to take place before we were declared a bilingual province. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Fred Garrett
Most Anglophone communities already provide services in only English.   
 
 
Fred Garrett
Reply to Rachel Woods
I don't think this is the case at all, but perhaps you might give a couple of examples that would correct my understanding of the situation. 
 
 
David Webb 
Reply to Rachel Woods
Source? 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Fred Garrett
Look at Sussex’s website and Facebook, it is only in English.  
 
 
David Webb
Reply to David Webb  
Still waiting. Maybe you just have a feeling?  
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to David Webb 
I did reply to you, look above. 
 
 
Rosella Melanson 
Reply to Fred Garrett
It seems to me that maybe you have not tried to get services in French ?   
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods 
So what? 
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Fred Garrett 
McAdam, Woodstock,florenceville, Sussex, Norton, Hampton, st-stephen, st-george, utopia, Minto, Sackville, Hartland, Blacks Harbour, Grand Manan, deer Island, Harvey, Stanley, Fredericton Junction, Chipman,................. 
 
 
 
 
Donald Smith 
If this can be done. why not just make most of New Brunswick English?
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Donald Smith  
It already is.
 
 
Ray Skavinsky 
Reply to Rachel Woods
Excuse me?! Lol...See my previous post Rachel 
 
 
Donald Smith 
Reply to Rachel Woods  
Not when there are City Council items and publications have to be divided into two languages among other things Rachel. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Donald Smith
Cities have different rules, as they should.   
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods 
Why?
 
 
Al Clark
Reply to David Amos
The article....is in english. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Al Clark
So are you
 
 
Al Clark
Reply to David Amos
some days  
 
 
 
 
 
Myra Maynes 
So this should go both ways then. Cities, towns, and municipalities that have a larger population of Anglophone residents should be unilingual English and only provide French "in certain circumstances". The balance is tipped in favor of Francophone people provincially with job monopoly etc. Someone pointed out that if this were a reverse headline stating a town declares English as the sole language...there absolutely would be riots. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Myra Maynes   
This is exactly how it is already.

Anglophone communities all over NB offer services only in English as that is all they are required to offer when the minority speaking French accounts for 20% or less of the population in that community.

 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Myra Maynes
The majority of provincial jobs are held by unilingual English. 
 
 
June Arnott 
Reply to Myra Maynes 
You bet there would be a HUGE uproar! 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to June Arnott  
There wouldn’t. Do you see an uproar in Sussex? They only communicate in English.
 
 
David Amos   
Content Deactivated
Reply to Rachel Woods
Why do you go on and on about Sussex? 
 
 
 
 
 
Ronald Miller 
This is how this entire province should be run. Majority French, then French is your official language, English majority, then English, if you are truly mixed, then you have both. Forced bilingualism everywhere has been a huge money drain on this province with few to no benefits.
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere  
Reply to Ronald Miller 
How much?
 
 
Ray Skavinsky 
Reply to Ronald Miller
Bingo! 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Ray Skavinsky 
Ditto 
 
 
 
 
 
Ronald Miller
Funny how a northern city is declaring French as their sole official language but yet somehow it is Higgs that is creating division. 
 
 
David Amos  
Reply to Ronald Miller  
Go figure
 
 
 
 
Franco Harris  
OK Sussex. Time to declare English only. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Franco Harris
They already only provide their information in English.  
 
 
Derek Miller 
Reply to Rachel Woods   
Not true, Beresford has always posted in both.  
 
 
Ray Skavinsky 
Reply to Rachel Woods   
Have you tried to speak en francais in Sussex? You might just be surprised.  
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Derek Miller
They had no obligation to, much like Sussex doesn’t have an obligation to and they only post in English  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods  
Wrong read the stop signs  
 
 
 
 
Franco Harris   
8% of the Province can speak French only. 
 
 
Mathieu Laperriere 
Reply to Franco Harris
Bilingual folks have a choice to speak French or English. Just because they speak English, they shouldn't have to.  
 
 
Toby Tolly  
Reply to Franco Harris 
or so they claim on the census?

as far as census goes I only speak English

Ca put se jouer a deux

 
David Amos   
Reply to Toby Tolly
Surely you jest  
 
 
 
 
Gary MacKay 
There is a small issue facing all of the new municipalities that have a population of more than 10 thousand (take Woodstock as an example) the counsel meetings will require simultaneous translation under NB law.

The amalgamation has done little to improve things and the infighting and taxes will only increase as a result. This is a prim example, IMO

 
Chuck Gendron 
Reply to Gary MacKay 
* council meetings   
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Gary MacKay 
Hmmm
  
 
 
 
Ray Skavinsky
Can't see anything wrong with that policy as the people are French. If this was Sussex for example,it should be English. 
 
 
Robert Buck 
Reply to Ray Skavinsky  
And can you imagine the outrage!!
 
 
Max Ruby  
Reply to Ray Skavinsky
Jan. 1 Beresford, Petit-Rocher, Nigadoo and Pointe-Verte were merged as part of local governance reform. In the 2021 census, 17.5 per cent of Beresford residents reported English as their first language. Seems very unwelcoming to them, they had no choice in local governance reform. Seems very divisive. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Robert Buck
There would be none. There is no requirement to offer bilingual service if the minority language is under 20%. And most Anglophone communities only offer services in English, yet no Francophones are outraged at that.  
 
 
Ray Skavinsky 
Reply to Rachel Woods  
You are right Rachel re the 20%,but to say Franchophones don't get outraged re service? You haven't been reading what the Ombsman ( know there's a new tern now) has been saying. It's been all over the media. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Ray Skavinsky 
Are Francophones outraged about Southern NB Communities not offering communications and service in French?  
 
 
Ralph Carson 
Reply to Rachel Woods 
Have any of those communities declared themselves English only?
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Ralph Carson 
They never “declared themselves French only”, they have only stated that their official language is French.  
 
 
Ralph Carson 
Reply to Rachel Woods 
Have any of those communities declared English as their only official language? 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Ralph Carson 
Nobody is stopping them from doing so 
 
 
Ralph Carson 
Reply to Rachel Woods
Exactly, but why would they? Bragging rights or just disturbers. Just because the law allows it doesn't mean the mayor should puff his chest out and exclaim we are officially English, that's just wrong. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Ralph Carson 
I agree 
 
 
 
 
Rodney Leblanc
How would they react if it was the other way around and English only ??? 
 
 
Clive Gibbons 
Reply to Rodney Leblanc
That's how it is in every town in southern NB. 
 
   
Max Ruby  
Reply to Rodney Leblanc
Beresford, Petit-Rocher, Nigadoo and Pointe-Verte were merged. over 17% in Beresford English is their first language. 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Rodney Leblanc 
It is the other way around in many NB communities.

Rules for thee but not for me?

 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods 
Have you read the stop signs in Sussex? 




 
Jake Newman 
so then the french speaking folks across NB should have no issue if other towns declare english as their sole lanaguage! 
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Jake Newman 
They really wouldn't have any issue. They understand communities do not have to provide services in both languages if the minority language is spoken by less than 20%.

Notice how no Francophones have issues with Sussex offering their communications and services only in English?

 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods
How many Francophones live in Sussex?  
 
 
Denny O'Brien  
Reply to Rachel Woods
By those rule some places in canada wouldnt have to provide services in engliah or french  
 




Daniel Henwell  
I makes sense. Pretty much 100% french up there. Same goes for southern towns going 100% english.
 
 
Mary MacKenzie 
Reply to Daniel Henwell
 It won't/can't happen in the south.
 
 
Rachel Woods 
Reply to Mary MacKenzie  
Sussex offers services 100% only in English, yet nobody is upset at that.

 
David Amos   
Reply to Rachel Woods
Are you sure about that?   
 
 
 
 
Billy Joe Mcallister 
couldn't this cause a backlash from anglo municipalities or in other words an even greater divide between French/English? 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Billy Joe Mcallister  
Of course
 
 
 
 
michael levesque
as a bilingual francophone i will be demanding my services in English only
 
 
Ray Skavinsky 
Reply to michael levesque
Why rock the boat.. it's no big deal. This is the problem with this divide...let sleeping dogs lie. 

 
 
David Amos   
Reply to michael levesque  
I was barred from the parliamentry properties with an English only document 
 
 



A drawing of the New Brunswick coat of arms. There is a crest featuring a boat and a lion, with a deer standing on its hind legs on each side of the crest and a fish above.

Daniel Guitard was re-elected to the Legislative Assembly on September 14, 2020, in his riding of Restigouche-Chaleur. He serves as the Opposition Critic for Transportation and Infrastructure.

He was first elected in September 2014. He was Deputy Government Whip, and in June 2016, he was appointed Chair of the Government Caucus and a member of the Jobs Board. He served as Vice-Chair of the Standing Committees on Economic Policy and Private Bills and served as a member of the Legislative Administration Committee and the Standing Committees on Procedure, Privileges and Legislative Officers and Public Accounts.

Following the September 2018 provincial election, he was elected Speaker of the 59th Legislative Assembly and served as Chair of the Legislative Administration Committee.

Mr. Guitard’s political career began in the eighties, when he became a Pointe-Verte municipal councillor. In October 2006, he became executive assistant to Roland Haché, Minister of the Environment and later Minister of Education. Mr. Guitard was elected Mayor of Pointe-Verte in the May 2012 municipal election. In January 2013, he became the first chair of the new Chaleur Regional Service Commission.

Daniel Guitard, son of Roland and Mona Guitard (née Frenette), of Pointe-Verte, was born on October 1, 1959. He attended École Séjour-Jeunesse, in Pointe-Verte, and École secondaire Nepisiguit, in Bathurst. In 1979, he received a diploma in business administration from the Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick, in Bathurst. In 2012, he completed his training as a financial planner with the Canadian Securities Institute.

He has extensive professional experience. He started out as a credit officer with the Canadian Acceptance Corporation. In January 1981, he began a career spanning nearly 16 years with the federal Department of Employment and Immigration. He rose through the ranks, going from claims clerk to unit head, before becoming a program officer and, finally, a community economic development adviser. In 1995, he went into business by acquiring a business specializing in the sale and servicing of recreational products. His business grew at a terrific rate. On five occasions, he won the silver award for dealers with the best customer ratings for after-sales service. In April 2011, he became a financial planner with the National Bank and an agent with the Knights of Columbus.

Mr. Guitard has been very active in his community as the chair of various festivals, a minor hockey and baseball team manager, a municipal councillor, and the chair of Atlas Park. He sat on the Belledune District Planning Commission and the BNPP Regional Police joint committee. For several years, he was an adviser to the franchise advisory committee of the Quebec franchiser Joe Rent All. He remains an active member of the Knights of Columbus council in his village.

Mr. Guitard is married to Diane Lagacé. They have three children: Yves, 30, who is married to Lucie Guitard, Andrée, 27, who is married to Charles Aubé, and Luc, 25. They also have two grandsons, Anthony and Jacob, and three granddaughters, Ariane, Chrystel and Lyanna.

 

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/mlas-resign-legislature-1.6612805 

 

Liberal MLA Daniel Guitard confirms resignation, plans mayoral run

N.B. Liberal Leader Susan Holt has 2 vacancies to choose from in byelection bid for seat

Restigouche-Chaleur Liberal MLA Daniel Guitard, a former speaker of the legislature, confirmed Tuesday he will resign to run for mayor of the new municipal entity of Belle-Baie. 

And he said he'll take his leave win or lose, which creates another potential opening for new Liberal Leader Susan Holt to win a byelection to get into the legislature.

Guitard says while his seat is strongly Liberal, this is not a case of him handing it over to Holt.

"Some people say I'm offering my seat. That's not the way it is. I'm retiring. … It'll be up to the local association and the provincial association with Ms. Holt to make this decision."

Bathurst East-Nepisiguit-Saint-Isidore MLA Denis Landry also plans to leave to run for mayor of Hautes-Terres in November. (Jacques Poitras/CBC News)

Bathurst East-Nepisiguit-Saint-Isidore MLA Denis Landry also plans to leave to run for mayor of Hautes-Terres in November.

Holt said Tuesday she will announce this week in which of the two ridings she will run for election. 

The exact timing of the two potential byelections remains unclear.

Guitard will leave whether he's elected mayor or not, but if he wins he may remain an MLA until his swearing-in, and it's not clear whether that will happen until the new year.

Guitard was the mayor of Pointe-Verte, a village near Belledune, before running provincially.

In 2018 he found himself speaker of the legislature after weeks of post-election jockeying between Brian Gallant's Liberal government and the Progressive Conservative opposition led by Blaine Higgs.
 
Liberal Leader Susan Holt said Tuesday she will announce this week which of the two ridings she would like to run in. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Gallant lost his majority in the election and the PCs won one more seat than the Liberals. Neither party had a majority and both initially refused to nominate a speaker because it would cost them one vote in the closely-divided legislature.

The Liberals finally blinked and put Guitard's name forward.

"I made myself a lot of friends on both sides of the house," he said Tuesday. "My two years as speaker made me realize we were opponents, not enemies.…

"Everyone of them on the other side, I do respect for what they're trying to do for the province. I don't agree with what they're doing, but I respect them for pushing forward what they believe in." 

Premier Blaine Higgs said last week he sees no reason to delay calling the byelections, but said the timing will depend on when the seats become officially vacant. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

7 Comments

 

Samuel Champlain 
Both he and Landry have put in their time and want to move on to other things, no issues there. I am sure they both know the chances of their party winning the next election is slim to none with the great job the current gov't has done and with Holt at the helm, slim just left town.  
 
 
Daniel Henwell 
Giving up a provincial MLA gig to be the mayor of a little town? Talk about a hit to the paycheck!  
 
 
Jim Cyr 
Pretty sad to see the Liberal Anglo push out two francophones so she can have a safe seat. Typical. And the francos just go right back to the Libs and take it, and take it, and take it. Masochists. 
 
 
Rosco holt
Reply to Jim Cyr 
They don't run for mayor for nothing. They have an agenda.  
 
 
val harris 
Congratulations on your retirements.. Well done both ridings were well represented and good luck on your mayor run..  
 
 
valmond landry 
the best decision they ever made !  
 
 
Theo Lavigne 
Both of them shouldn't let the door hit then on the way out 
 
 
 
 

Denis Landry was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick on September 11, 1995, as member for Centre-Péninsule. He served on the Standing Committee on Law Amendments, the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, and the Special Cabinet Committee on Social Policy Renewal. He was a member of the Action Nord group and served on the ministerial committee for the economic development of the Acadian Peninsula.

Reelected in 2003, he served on the Standing Committee on Private Bills and the Select Committee on Wood Supply. As a member of the official opposition, he was Tourism Critic and Automobile Insurance Critic.

Mr. Landry was elected again in 2006, as member for the new riding of Centre-Péninsule—Saint-Sauveur, and he was Minister of Transportation until 2010.

Elected for a fourth term in 2010, he was Official Opposition Whip and served on the Standing Committee on Estimates and the Legislative Administration Committee. He was also Natural Resources, Environment, and Communications New Brunswick Critic for the official opposition.

He was re-elected in 2014 to represent the new riding of Bathurst East-Nepisiguit-Saint-Isidore. He was Minister of Natural Resources and Minister of Human Resources until 2016, and then Minister of Justice and Public Safety. He also served on the Jobs Board and the Policy Board until 2018.

Elected for a sixth term on September 24, 2018, he was appointed Minister of Justice and Public Safety, as well as Acting Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure, and he held these positions until November 2, 2018. He then became Transportation and Infrastructure Critic for the official opposition.

On February 12, 2019, Mr. Landry was elected Acting Leader of the Official Opposition and Acting Liberal Party Leader by the members of the Liberal caucus.

Re-elected for a seventh mandate on September 14, 2020, he serves as the Fisheries and Aquaculture Critic and the Justice Critic. Mr. Landry is the Official Opposition Whip.

Before going into politics, Mr. Landry worked as a logger for 17 years. Active in the labour movement, he served as Secretary-Treasurer and then President of Local 123 of the Canadian Paperworkers Union. He also served as president of the coalition against changes in unemployment insurance, president of the Acadian Peninsula labour council, and provincial coordinator for the 1995 World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen, which he attended as a consultant.

Mr. Landry graduated from Polyvalente Louis-Mailloux in Caraquet, in 1975, and he took various training courses, including a forestry instructor course at the Memramcook Institute, leadership training at St. Francis Xavier University, a literacy instruction course in Fredericton, and training in small business creation at the Université de Moncton, Shippagan campus.

Born in Val-Doucet, Mr. Landry is the eldest of 11 children. He and his wife, Johanne, have three children, Sébastien (Yelena Landry), Natacha (Michel Godin), and Cédric (Joannie Landry), as well as seven grandchildren, Kassime, Karellie, Kaissa, Kayana, Benjamin, Maxime, and Alexandra.

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment