Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Half-billion-dollar NB Power rip-off must end, says business official

 
 


---------- Original message ---------
From: Brandy Gellner <Brandy.Gellner@libertyutilities.com>
Date: Mon, May 4, 2026 at 11:15 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 And Games People Play
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I am currently out of the office, returning Monday, May 11. I will respond to your email upon my return.

For immediate inquiries, please contact Steven Mullen.

Thank you.

This message and any attachments contain confidential information and are solely for the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient, any dissemination, review, disclosure, forwarding, distribution, copying or reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. Please notify the sender immediately by email if you have received this message in error and delete this message immediately from your system.
 
 
 
---------- Original message ---------
From: Moore, Rob - M.P. <Rob.Moore@parl.gc.ca>
Date: Mon, Mar 16, 2026 at 4:02 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 And Games People Play
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

*This is an automated response*

 

Thank you for contacting the Honourable Rob Moore, P.C., M.P. office. We appreciate the time you took to get in touch with our office.

 

If you did not already, please ensure to include your full contact details on your email and the appropriate staff will be able to action your request. We strive to ensure all constituent correspondence is responded to in a timely manner.

 

If your question or concern is time sensitive, please call our office: 506-832-4200.

 

Again, we thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts and concerns.

 

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Office of the Honourable Rob Moore, P.C., M.P.

Member of Parliament for Fundy Royal

rob.moore@parl.gc.ca

 

 
 
---------- Original message ---------
From: Shelley Petit <chairperson@nbcpd.org>
Date: Thu, May 16, 2024 at 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 And Games People Play
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

We won't be done these meetings until at least Nov. 
Either way, it's going to be a disaster
 
Re: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 And Games People Play
Inbox

David Amos david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com

Mon, May 4, 11:11 PM



---------- Original message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, May 4, 2026 at 11:11 PM
Subject: Re: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 And Games People Play
To: Mitton, Megan (LEG) <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, David.Coon <David.Coon@gnb.ca>, <keith.chiasson@gnb.ca>, <jacques.j.leblanc@gnb.ca>, <jean-claude.d'amours@gnb.ca>, <robert.mckee@gnb.ca>, <robert.gauvin@gnb.ca>, <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, premier <premier@gnb.ca>, Arseneau, Kevin (LEG) <kevin.a.arseneau@gnb.ca>, Ross.Wetmore <Ross.Wetmore@gnb.ca>, John.Williamson <John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca>, rob.moore <rob.moore@parl.gc.ca>, Bill.Oliver <Bill.Oliver@gnb.ca>, <susan.holt@gnb.ca>, <LTgov@gnb.ca>, Benoit.Bourque <Benoit.Bourque@gnb.ca>, Rene.Legacy <Rene.Legacy@gnb.ca>, guy.arseneault <guy.arseneault@gnb.ca>, chuck.chiasson <chuck.chiasson@gnb.ca>, Robert. Jones <Robert.Jones@cbc.ca>, rrichard <rrichard@nb.aibn.com>
Cc: louis-philippe.gauthier@cfib.ca <louis-philippe.gauthier@cfib.ca>, frederic.gionet@cfib.ca <frederic.gionet@cfib.ca>, <david@ibew37.com>, david.sollows@gnb.ca <david.sollows@gnb.ca>, <mike.legere@adityabirla.com>, <Ron.marcolin@cme-mec.ca>, <executivedirector@forestnb.com>, Brandy.Gellner@libertyutilities.com <Brandy.Gellner@libertyutilities.com>, JohnFurey@fureylegal.com <JohnFurey@fureylegal.com>, Murray, Leanne <LMurray@nbpower.com>, Petrie, Jamie <JPetrie@nbpower.com>, Murphy, Darren <DaMurphy@nbpower.com>, Porter, George <George.Porter@nbpower.com>, <pmckay@nbpower.com>, <lgordon@nbpower.com>, <kevgibson@nbpower.com>, NBP Regulatory <NBPRegulatory@nbpower.com>, NBEUB/CESPNB <General@nbeub.ca>, Young, Dave <Dave.Young@nbeub.ca>, Aherrington@lawsoncreamer.com <Aherrington@lawsoncreamer.com>, Dickie, Michael <Michael.Dickie@nbeub.ca>, Mitchell, Kathleen <Kathleen.Mitchell@nbeub.ca>, Veronique Otis <Veronique.Otis@nbeub.ca>, Susan Colwell <Susan.Colwell@nbeub.ca>, Melissa Curran <Melissa.Curran@nbeub.ca>, Hoyt, Len <len.hoyt@mcinnescooper.com>, jeff.garrett@sjenergy.com <jeff.garrett@sjenergy.com>, shelley.wood@sjenergy.com <shelley.wood@sjenergy.com>, dan.dionne@perth-andover.com <dan.dionne@perth-andover.com>, pierreroy@edmundston.ca <pierreroy@edmundston.ca>, <ryan.mitchell@sjenergy.com>, <pzarnett@bdrenergy.com>, rburgoyne@coxandpalmer.com <rburgoyne@coxandpalmer.com>, <hwafaei@stikeman.com>, gzacher@stikeman.com <gzacher@stikeman.com>, <hanrahan.dion@jdirving.com>, alain.chiasson2@gnb.ca <alain.chiasson2@gnb.ca>, <randy@sjhdc.ca>, <dustin@emrydia.com>, <rdk@indecon.com>, <shelley@nbcpd.org>


Cry me a river


Half-billion-dollar NB Power rip-off must end, says business official

Canadian Federation of Independent Business argues small commercial operations have been subsidizing households' electricity rates for years

Author of the article:
John Chilibeck
Published May 04, 2026

Half-billion-dollar NB Power rip-off must end, says business official

Canadian Federation of Independent Business argues small commercial operations have been subsidizing households' electricity rates for years

Author of the article:
John Chilibeck
Published May 04, 2026  •  Last updated 2 hours ago  •  3 minute read
Join the conversation
Louis-Philippe Gauthier
Louis-Philippe Gauthier, Atlantic vice president for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, says small enterprises have been ripped off more than half a billion dollars by NB Power's poor rate design over the years. BRUNSWICK NEWS ARCHIVES

Louis-Philippe Gauthier figures NB Power has ripped off small businesses about half a billion dollars over the last 25 years.

The local spokesman for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business says he came up with the rough figure when his organization looked closely at the amount the public utility was charging its small business customers, a rate class called general service.

“I remember the last time I napkin-calculated this,” he said in an interview on Monday. “If you considered that businesses were overpaying anywhere between $18 million to $22 million a year, subsidizing the residential rates, and then multiplied that going backward 10 years, that’s up to $220 million, roughly. So over, let’s say 25 years, you could have seen small businesses in New Brunswick subsidizing residential ratepayers by over half a billion dollars.

“That’s not chump change, for sure, but it’s in the past. We have to make sure we aren’t subsidizing the other rates going forward.”

For years, the organization and the small businesses it represents have been complaining that NB Power has overcharged them for their electricity bills.

Like most utilities, NB Power follows a user-pay model. The money it recoups from ratepayers is supposed to pay for the service they get.

But the devil is in the details.

NB Power charges different rates to different kinds of customers. Large industrial customers might pay a lower overall rate because it’s cheaper to give them large amounts of electricity in bulk, with fewer lines and other infrastructure required to service them.

Households are among the most expensive to provide electricity on a per-customer basis. It costs far more money to build, maintain and service the thousands of power lines, transformers and meters connecting individual homes than it does for a few big users.

Small commercial operations would be found somewhere in between.

But through NB Power’s own admission, it hasn’t always been fair to this large group of small business customers, overcharging them and undercharging households.

It’s called rate cross-subsidization, and the business group wants it to stop.

On Thursday, NB Power filed a 115-page plan to the regulator, the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board, that spells out its rate design modernization plan.

The latest update builds on work started six years ago to improve its rate design, at the board’s behest.

“The rate design modernization process has been underway since 2020 and is focused on fairness,” wrote NB Power spokeswoman Elizabeth Fraser in an email to Brunswick News.

“We want to make sure electricity rates better reflect the cost to serve, while also reducing unintended cross‑subsidization between customers.”

She said the board would have to review and approve any proposed changes before they took effect.

So far, the public intervenor for the energy sector, who is appointed by the provincial government to safeguard the public interest, hasn’t taken a stance on the new rate design.

“Rate design is always about who’s gonna pay for what and how much,” Alain Chiasson explained in an interview. “It’s kind of a zero-sum game. If you raise the percentage for one group, well, the other group will lose.”

However, the intervenor added that rate design was intricate and complicated, given all the costs for equipment, fuel and power plants. He added that recently, NB Power eliminated one rate class, lumping some smaller business customers with larger ones, complicating matters.

NB Power proposes to change the rates beginning in 2027 over several years. The utility wants to smooth out the transition process, so households don’t experience rate shock similar to what they have gone through the last few years.

Electricity prices for all customer classes have gone up about 28 per cent in four years. About 430,000 NB Power customers were hit with the higher prices.

For the average household alone, the increases have cost hundreds of dollars more each year because most New Brunswickers heat with electricity.

Gauthier said businesses understood that justice couldn’t be served right away, otherwise households would suffer price pain enormously.

“Businesses would expect that the Energy and Utilities Board to instruct NB Power to apply the new rate design in a timely way,” he said. “Is timely three years, seven or 10?

“The sooner the better.”



On Fri, Feb 16, 2024 at 3:06 AM David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:

---------- Original message ----------
From: John Furey <JohnFurey@fureylegal.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Feb 2024 20:31:03 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 Its
obvious Holland's minions in NB Power are pulling a fast one within
the EUB before Higgy has a writ dopped an Mikey is out a job
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I am away from my office until Tuesday, February 20, 2024, and have
limited access to email. If your matter requires immediate attention,
please contact me directly at 506-444-1328.


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2024/02/nb-power-facing-326m-revenue-loss-after.html

Monday 5 February 2024

Games People Play

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-power-rate-request-1.7108327

Delayed N.B. Power rate request promoted as a government achievement by PC Party
Premier Blaine Higgs personally credited with thwarting increase
despite ordering utility to shape up

Robert Jones · CBC News · Posted: Feb 08, 2024 6:00 AM AST


A man with grey hair and glasses addresses microphones in a hallyway.
New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs is being credited with his party
for thwarting part of a 9.25 per cent rate increase request by N.B.
Power, even though the utility was following instructions it got from
Higgs. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

New Brunswick's Progressive Conservative Party is applauding the
possibility N.B. Power may not be able to raise electricity rates as
planned on April 1 even though that may cost the utility $32.6 million
in revenue it needs to reach financial targets set for it by the
Progressive Conservative government.

"Who would you rather see get the $32.6M? N.B. Power? Or N.B.
Families?" the PC party posted on its social media platforms Tuesday
about the potential for a delayed rate increase.

N.B. Power has applied for a 9.25 per cent increase that it says it
needs to begin on April 1, but a hearing by the New Brunswick Energy
and Utilities Board into that request isn't scheduled to start until
mid-May because it was submitted more than 10 weeks late.

That, N.B. Power fears, could push a decision on new rates from the
EUB out until July 1, which its lawyer John Furey has said the utility
cannot afford.

"Even in the most optimistic scenario in which the board is able to
render a partial decision which enables the implementation of rates by
July 1, 2024, N.B. Power will sustain a negative net impact of $32.636
million," Furey wrote in a submission to the EUB last week.

A facebook post             In posts on X and Facebook, New
Brunswick's PC Party said Premier Blaine Higgs 'helped save
ratepayers"' by causing N.B. Power to file its rate increase request
72 days late. (PCNB / Facebook)

N.B. Power was operating under a directive from the EUB to file for
new rates by Oct. 4 to allow for the submission of evidence for and
against the proposal, a full hearing on that collected evidence and a
decision, prior to April 1.

However, on Sept. 25, nine days before that October filing deadline,
Premier Blaine Higgs signed a cabinet order extending debt targets
N.B. Power has to meet by two years, from March 2027 to March 2029.

That significantly lowered the amount of money the utility would need
for immediate debt reduction in the coming year and it upended five
months of budgeting at N.B. Power which then had to be reconstructed.

Eventually the rate request was filed on Dec. 15, 72 days late.

"The entire GRA (general rate application) filing package, which was
largely complete as of September 27, 2023, when the directive was
received, must be updated and/or revised to reflect that directive,"
N.B. Power's chief financial officer Darren Murphy said in an
affidavit explaining the delay to the board.

In its social media posts Tuesday the PC party credited Premier Blaine
Higgs personally for causing the delay in N.B. Power's application and
putting its April 1 increase in jeopardy.

A tweet Prominent PC candidate Faytene Grasseschi told followers that
the Higgs government 'chose families' when it slowed down N.B. Power's
application for new rates. (Faytene Grasseschi/ X)

Premier Blaine Higgs "and the PCNB Government helped save ratepayers
from at least some of N.B. Power's massive planned hike," it wrote.

Prominent PC candidate in the riding of Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins
Faytene Grasseschi amplified the post on her own platforms and
suggested that forcing a delay in N.B. Power's application had been
done by the premier and cabinet on purpose.

"The provincial (PCNB) government chose families," wrote Grasseschi.

However, the "massive planned hike" the PC party says Higgs interfered
with flows from instructions given to N.B. Power by Higgs in the first
place.

In its 300-page rate application, N.B. Power states it needs to
generate more than $1 billion in profit over the next five years to
meet financial targets it was given in the premier's Sept. 25
directive and that starts with a 9.25 per cent rate increase on April
1 and a second 9.25 per cent increase the following April.

"The Executive Council of the Government of New Brunswick directs N.B.
Power to make plans to achieve a capital structure of at least 20 per
cent equity by 2029," states the application.

A man wearing a suit standing in front of a brown building Natural
Resources and Energy Development Minister Mike Holland has expressed
concerns for several years about N.B. Power's financial condition and
has argued for less government interference in its affairs. (Jacques
Poitras/CBC)

"The requested [9.25 per cent] increases form the starting point for
achieving 20 per cent equity by March 31, 2029."

The Higgs government has insisted for several years N.B. Power needs
to improve its financial condition by reducing its high debt levels, a
position also taken by New Brunswick's last two auditors general.

Originally in December, Energy Minister Mike Holland said he wasn't
happy to see the large increase N.B. Power was asking for but said he
supported it taking action to get its finances in order.

"Nobody wants to see something like that, but it is a part of the
process of the utility properly putting together a rate increase
request," said Holland.

On Wednesday Holland's office did not return messages asking about the
PC Party posts crediting the government with slowing down N.B. Power's
application.

Doug Williams, executive director of the New Brunswick PC Party said
the post was made to counterbalance a CBC article on the issue
published last Monday that presented the delayed rate increase only as
a problem for N.B. Power, not a benefit to utility customers.

A building with NB Power written on it N.B. Power says it needs to
turn more than $1 billion in profit over five years to meet 2029
financial targets set for it by the Higgs government, starting with a
9.25 per cent increase this April. (Michael Heenan/CBC)

"The CBC article only chose to focus on "revenue loss" for N.B.
Power," wrote Williams in an email.

"PCNB wanted to provide balance to the discussion by highlighting that
changing the debt reduction dates for N.B. Power equals more money in
the pocket of New Brunswickers."

N.B. Power has applied to the EUB for a special interim rate increase
to take effect on April 1 that it says it can refund to customers in
whole or in part if the May hearing does not support what it has asked
for.

A similar request in 2016 was rejected by the board.

N.B. Power claims without an interim increase it will suffer $32.6
million in lost revenue in April, May and June that it cannot afford
to give up.

About half of that would be revenue from residential customers and
half from commercial and industrial customers.

The EUB will hear arguments on that application March 1.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Robert Jones

Reporter

Robert Jones has been a reporter and producer with CBC New Brunswick
since 1990. His investigative reports on petroleum pricing in New
Brunswick won several regional and national awards and led to the
adoption of price regulation in 2006.
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices




139 Comments



David Amos
Why is it I am humming the old Joe South tune from my youth "Games
People Play"???


David Amos
Does anyone recall NB Power suing the EUB last year???



David Amos
Surprise Surprise Surprise


David Amos
Content Deactivated
Go Figure

New Brunswick Power Corporation

APPLICATION FOR INTERIM RATES

NOTICE

New Brunswick Power Corporation has filed a Notice of Motion with the

New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board seeking an interim order as

follows:

1. Approving the schedule of rates for the 2024/25 fiscal year as set

out in Exhibit NBP 02.07 in Matter 552 which reflects differential

rates and an average 9.25 per cent increase to all customer classes,

effective from April 1, 2024 until further Order of the Board;

2. Directing NB Power to make billing adjustments for customers in the

event that final rates approved by the Board are different than rates

approved in the Interim Order, and further directing NB Power to keep

appropriate records to permit such adjustments;

3. Directions respecting the hearing of this Motion; and

4. Such further Orders and Directions as the Board may deem appropriate.

NB Power’s Notice of Motion and the supporting affidavit may be viewed

on the Board’s website at www.nbeub.ca under Matter No. 552.

As per Rule 4.3 of the Rules of Procedure, any party to this matter

who wishes to respond to the Motion must file and serve on all other

parties, a written response outlining the party’s position and the

grounds for same along with a specific indication of any evidence upon

which the party seeks to present or rely no later than Thursday,

February 8th at 4:00 p.m. (Atlantic Time).

David Amos
Content Deactivated
Reply to David Amos
NB Power is to file with the Board, and serve on all other parties,

its written argument in support of its motion, including copies of any

authorities upon which it intends to rely no later than Thursday,

February 15th at 4:00 p.m. (Atlantic Time).

Parties who have filed a written response to the Motion are to file

their written argument outlining their position in response to the

Motion, including copies of any authorities upon which they intend to

rely no later than Thursday, February 22nd at 4:00 p.m. (Atlantic

Time).

The Board will hold an in-person hearing on the Motion for Interim

Rates on Friday, March 1, 2024, beginning at 9:30 a.m. (Atlantic

Time). The location will be confirmed by the Board shortly.

New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board

P.O. Box 5001

Suite 1400, 15 Market Square

Saint John, NB E2L 4Y9

Telephone: (506) 658-2504

Toll Free 1-866-766-2782

Fax: (506) 643-7300

E-Mail: general@nbeub.

David Amos
Reply to David Amos
As per Rule 4.3 of the Rules of Procedure, any party to this matter

who wishes to respond to the Motion must file and serve on all other

parties, a written response outlining the party’s position and the

grounds for same along with a specific indication of any evidence upon

which the party seeks to present or rely no later than Thursday,

February 8th at 4:00 p.m. (Atlantic Time).




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIBlCac8_wk&ab_channel=Beat-Club


Joe South - Games People Play (1969)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDli21XGZQI&ab_channel=CharlesLeblanc


Minister of Natural Resources and Energy Mike Holland rants of leaving
politics with Blogger!
Charles Leblanc



---------- Original message ----------
From: "Holland, Mike Hon. (ERD/DER)" <Mike.Holland@gnb.ca>
Date: Thu, 9 Apr 2020 19:33:51 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Mikey Holland and Johnny Green Does your
buddy Chucky Leblanc have the balls to ask Roger Brown about my 1965
Harley and the Yankee Wiretaps tapes in its saddlebag?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email.  Your thoughts, comments and input are
greatly valued.  You can be assured that all emails and letters are
carefully read, reviewed and taken into consideration.

If your issue is Constituency related, please contact Cheryl Layton at
my constituency office in Albert at (506) 856-4961 or
Cheryl.Layton@gnb.ca.

Thanks again for your email!
Mike Holland
Minister
MLA, Albert

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Merci pour votre courriel.  Nous vous sommes très reconnaissants de
nous avoir fait part de vos idées, commentaires et observations.  Nous
tenons à vous assurer que nous lisons attentivement et prenons en
considération tous les courriels et lettres que nous recevons.

Si votre courriel est lié à un enjeu de circonscription, veuillez
contacter Cheryl Layton à mon bureau de circonscription dans Albert au
(506) 856-4961 ou Cheryl.Layton@gnb.ca.

Merci encore pour votre courriel!
Mike Holland
Ministre
Député, Albert

Mail Delivery Subsystem mailer-daemon@googlemail.com

Mon, May 4, 11:11 PM (1 hour ago)



to me
Error Icon

Address not found

Your message wasn't delivered to Veronique.Otis@nbeub.ca because the address couldn't be found, or is unable to receive mail.
LEARN MORE
Warning This link will take you to a third-party site
The response from the remote server was:

550 5.4.1 Recipient address rejected: Access denied. For more information see https://aka.ms/EXOSmtpErrors [TO1PEPF00005345.CANPRD01.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM 2026-05-05T02:11:57.141Z 08DEA6F8DDA4CD49]

Mail Delivery Subsystem mailer-daemon@googlemail.com

Mon, May 4, 11:11 PM (1 hour ago)



to me
Error Icon

Address not found

Your message wasn't delivered to George.Porter@nbpower.com because the address couldn't be found, or is unable to receive mail.
LEARN MORE
Warning This link will take you to a third-party site
The response from the remote server was:

550 ETP102 recipient rejected by downstream MTA. Reason: [ 5.4.1 Recipient address rejected: Access denied. For more information see https://aka.ms/EXOSmtpErrors [YT2PEPF000001CF.CANPRD01.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM 2026-05-02T20:18:04.312Z 08DEA70FBEF85445] ] - 3z9s8Sv-61787-08b91CB47695CE159F960b9aef6

Final-Recipient: rfc822; George.Porter@nbpower.com
Action: failed
Status: 5.1.1
Remote-MTA: dns; primary.us.email.fireeyecloud.com. (34.223.36.123, the server
 for the domain nbpower.com.)
Diagnostic-Code: smtp; 550 ETP102 recipient rejected by downstream MTA. Reason: [ 5.4.1 Recipient address rejected: Access denied. For more information see https://aka.ms/EXOSmtpErrors [YT2PEPF000001CF.CANPRD01.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM 2026-05-02T20:18:04.312Z 08DEA70FBEF85445] ] - 3z9s8Sv-61787-08b91CB47695CE159F960b9aef6
Last-Attempt-Date: Mon, 04 May 2026 19:11:57 -0700 (PDT)


RCMP from Campbellton, who gave me permission to do the interview said, ‘Leave the governor alone.

  

Names in the running: Governor, The Coach and Smoothy all have municipal ambitions

N.B. has looser rules than other provinces when it comes to eye-catching candidate names

When New Brunswickers vote in municipal elections this month, they might see some rather informal names on the ballots.

And they go beyond a Stephen using “Steve,” or a Christopher going by “Chris.” 

“We have a Paddy, and there’s also a potatoes, en francais, we have a Governor, and there's The Coach and a Smoothy,” Paul Harpelle, a spokesperson for Elections New Brunswick, said as he cited examples from the May 11 ballots.

Ballot names are allowed to be more eye-catching in New Brunswick, which has less strict rules about the practice than some other provinces.

Harpelle said current rules for both provincial and municipal elections don’t allow honorific titles to be used as part of someone’s official ballot name.

“But nicknames are aplenty,” he said. 

Michael (Bauble) Plourde, who’s running for a council seat in Edmundston, said the nickname comes from his childhood.

“When I was about 12 or 13 years old, there was a show on French TV called Épopée rock," Plourde said. "And there was a character by the name of Bouboule who people thought looked somewhat like me."

A photo of a man    Candidate Michael Plourde of Edmundston says Bauble has been his nickname since childhood. (Michael Plourde/Facebook)

One day an anglophone student tried to say that Plourde looked like the character, but mispronounced it as Bauble, he said.

“And the whole class started laughing, and they started calling me that, and it has followed me everywhere,” he said. 

If celebrities like Cher or Madonna can go by a nickname, Plourde said, he should be able to use his on the ballot.

WATCH | Nickhames are aplenty:
 
Several N.B. municipal candidates using nicknames on the ballot this year
May 3|
Duration 1:55
 
Provincial rules allow candidates to use a nickname, while other provinces have stricter rules.

“Some people just call me Bob. I have a nickname to my nickname,” Plourde said with a laugh. “I mean, if the name fits, embrace it.”

Clint (The Coach) Kingsbury, running for council in the Fredericton suburb of New Maryland said his nickname comes from when he started working as a wrestling coach.

An election signClint Kingsbury put his nickname on the ballot for New Maryland council. Some people might know him as The Coach and not by his legal name, he said. (Clint Kingsbury/Facebook)

“Just like in any practice facility, you know, the athletes say ‘Coach, coach, coach,’ all of this type of thing,” Kingsbury said, adding that the nickname has followed him into his real estate career too. 

“It helps because sometimes you just don't remember the name. Some people are terrible at names, but they might remember a nickname or something that they've heard, whether it's positive or negative.”

In Lakeland Ridges, J.J. (Governor) Carrier, who was a newspaper reporter for 40 years, is running for a council position.

He said Governor comes from the 1974 western movie Blazing Saddles, because Carrier would recite lines from the movie while playing baseball league when he was younger. 

The Governor moniker followed him through his journalism career on the north shore and was even once used by then-prime minister Jean Chrétien at a campaign stop in Belledune, he said.

“I got too close for a photo and CSIS took me out of the building, almost arrested me for being too close to the prime minister ," Carrier said. 'And allegedly the Prime Minister said ‘What happened, that journalist, the governor, why did you take him away?’”

“But the RCMP from Campbellton, who gave me permission to do the interview said, ‘Leave the governor alone.’”

Carrier said it’s an honour to have a positive nickname, “Because the people like you enough to say ‘that'a somebody that we respect.’”

Martin (Paddy) Quinn of Miramichi joked that “nobody in a million years” would know who Martin Quinn was. He’s always gone by a version of his middle name, Patrick.

“If I’m at the doctor's office or dentist office, they'll be saying ‘Martin. Martin. Martin.’ I'll be yacking away with someone and finally they say, ‘I think they’re talking to you here.’ I'm like, ‘Oh yeah, right, I am Martin.'

“I don't know if it’s a Miramichi thing or New Brunswick thing, maybe an East Coast thing here, but we all like to hang a nickname on someone and run with it.”

Most other provinces do allow nicknames on ballots, but several have a strict process about it.

In Alberta provincial elections, the chief electoral officer may disallow the use of a nickname that is not someone’s legal name in the interest of "having regard to the integrity of the election,” according to a spokesperson for Elections Alberta. 

A man poses for a photoMartin (Paddy) Quinn, running for council in Miramichi, said no one would know him by his legal name. (Submitted by Paddy Quinn)

“This is likely referring to a name that is a joke, offensive, or intended to mislead or confuse electors,” the spokesperson wrote in an email, but added that no one in the office could ever remember this rule ever being used.

Elections Nova Scotia has a “candidate name appearance policy,” which states that candidates must show proof when requesting to use a name besides their legal name on a ballot. 

Types of proof that candidates can submit include news articles, debit cards, professional or political social media pages, bills or financial statements, or diplomas.

In Quebec, nicknames are allowed, provided that “it is consistently well-known in political, professional or social life and that they are acting in good faith,” Elections Quebec spokesperson Julie St-Arnaud-Drolet wrote in an email in French.

When asked how the good faith measure is determined, St-Arnaud-Drolet wrote that candidates must swear an oath and fill out a form when filling out paperwork to run. 

Back in Fredericton, Harpelle, with Elections N.B., said any changes to the rules would have to be made by the province. 

“I'm quite certain that if any names did set off any alarms and you know, the staff here would do the due diligence,” Harpelle said.

It could be challenging to determine if a nickname is truly legitimately used by a candidate in their community, he said.

“So I don't know if we've ever looked at the concept of having someone sign an attestation saying that's truly their nickname,” Harpelle said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King's College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

 
 
 

Candidates lining up to run municipality after troubled inaugural term

A troubled first four years at Lakeland Ridges hasn’t dampened the ambitions of residents who hope to win seats in the upcoming municipal elections, with 18 council candidates vying for eight seats, and the common refrain is that co-operation this time around will be key to good governance.

The rural western New Brunswick municipality was the first in New Brunswick to be placed under supervision in July 2023, after its inaugural council became mired in internal conflict that led to a breakdown in governance and the suspension of council’s decision-making powers under the Control of Municipalities Act.

The intervention followed months of reported dysfunction, including internal division and allegations of bullying, and ended with the resignation of three councillors and the mayor – who is now hoping to return with a run for a council seat.

The provincial supervision period ended in May 2024 with the reinstatement of council.

Four incumbents are among the 18 candidates hoping for a council seat.

Across the field, candidates cite similar priorities: clearer roles, stronger co-operation and moving past divisions that shaped the first council term.

Former mayor Tanya Cloutier, who resigned during the previous council term, said she wanted to run again because it was so difficult for her to step down in the first place and still wants to serve.

She said her focus is collaboration and rebuilding trust.

Mayor Leonard Foster, who entered office during the supervision period, said his focus has been stabilizing operations and reinforcing council-led governance.

“I’m hopeful,” he said. “There will be new people coming in, and I think we’ve built a working relationship with administration that will help.”

Mayoral candidate Greg Grant said he is also running to help improve stability and co-operation at council.

“I believe the skill set that I have, along with my knowledge of the area, can help bring people together,” he said. “We need to get back to where council makes decisions, and the mayor and administration carry them out.”

He said unity will likely continued to be a key challenge.

“We’ve got to get people thinking collectively for the betterment of the whole,” he said.

But even new council candidates say they understand the lessons learned from the first go-around and the troubles caused by clashing opinions and personalities.

First-time candidate Rhonda Alward pointed to lingering divisions between communities such as Canterbury and Meductic as part of the adjustment after amalgamation.

“Accountability is big, and openness, and people trying to work together for the better of the community as a whole,” she said.

That was echoed by Ward 4 candidate Heather Neilson.

“The biggest difficulty has been shifting the mindset from focusing on individual communities to thinking and moving forward as one municipality,” she said.

Incumbent councillor Randy Stairs said the next term must focus on structure and governance basics.
“The biggest thing is for everybody to understand what the rules are,” he said. “Anything personal has to be set aside.”

Stairs said council showed improvement late in the last term and rebuilding trust requires transparency, and that it’s understood the focus must remain on progress.

— — —

Here’s a full list of candidates for Lakeland Ridges:

Mayor: Leonard Foster (incumbent), Greg Grant

Ward 1 (two seats): Elizabeth Luimes (acclaimed); Hans Stevens (acclaimed)

Ward 2 (two seats): Linda Porter (incumbent); Lisa Antworth; Judy Ann Cole

Ward 3 (two seats):  Randy Stairs (incumbent); Chris Yerxa (incumbent); Rhonda Alward; Stephen Manuel; Karen Patterson; Sterling Wright

Ward 4 (two seats): Barb Glanville (incumbent); J.J. (Governor) Carrier, Tanya Cloutier, Heather A. Neilson and Shawn Oldenburg.

 
 

Lakeland Ridges

Lakeland Ridges
Position to fill# Positions to fill# CandidatesStatus
Mayor12(Election)
Councillor Ward 122(No Election)
Councillor Ward 223(Election)
Councillor Ward 326(Election)
Councillor Ward 425(Election)

 

Lakeland Ridges
NameOptional Contact Information
Mayor  (1 to elect)
Leonard G. Foster
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-894-2421
Email : Billdad284@hotmail.com
Gregory (Greg) GrantTelephone : 506-425-0865
Councillor Ward 1  (2 to elect)
Elizabeth Luimes
(accl.)
Email : lizluimes@gmail.com
Hans Stevens
(accl.)
Telephone : 1-780-265-5519
Email : hans-stevens@hotmail.com
Councillor Ward 2  (2 to elect)
Lisa AntworthTelephone : 506-324-0924
Email : blantworth@hotmail.com
Judy Ann ColeTelephone : 506-277-9895
Email : judycole540@gmail.com
Linda L. Porter
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-328-7937
Email : alporter191@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 3  (2 to elect)
Rhonda L. AlwardTelephone : 506-323-1159
Email : alward.rhonda@gmail.com
Stephen ManuelTelephone : 506-328-7118
Email : stephenmanuel2024@gmail.com
Karen PattersonTelephone : 506-324-0297
Email : karenpatterson2002@gmail.com
Randy Stairs
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-324-0676
Email : stairsrandall@gmail.com
Sterling WrightTelephone : 506-325-8027
Email : 1957sterling.wright@gmail.com
Chris Yerxa
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-425-2015
Email : crazy_chris69@hotmail.com
Councillor Ward 4  (2 to elect)
J.J. (Governor) CarrierTelephone : 506-272-1880
Email : govcarrier@hotmail.com
Tanya Marie CloutierTelephone : 506-323-8065
Email : tcloutier7@gmail.com
Barb Glanville
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 902-449-1826
Email : barbglanville@ymail.com
http://barb4council.ca
Heather A. NeilsonTelephone : 506-470-0717
Email : h.neilson70@gmail.com
Shawn OldenburgTelephone : 506-230-7821
Email : oldenburgs@live.com
 
 
 
 
 
 

JJ (Governor) Carrier Is Running In Canterbury (Ward 4) In Lakeland Ridges In The 2026 N.B. Vote

JJ (Governor) Carrier 
 
Apr 18, 2026 
The May 11 municipal elections in the 'supervillage' will elect two members to Lakeland Ridges' eight-member council from the former Village of Canterbury and adjoining areas, with Carrier, a longtime award-winning journalist, volunteer social justice organizer, and anti-poverty advocate, one of the five candidates for the spots
 

10 Comments

@JJGovernorCarrier
Advance polls are hot up here!
 
 
I hope a lot of people vote.
 
 
I'm running in Maple Hills at Large! I hope this helps.
 
Good luck brother...I don't take donations but will take the Toonie and give it to a local charity
 
 
 
Yepper...Don't be afraid o post your elect plug here...
 
 
 
 
 
 

Acadian group launches legal challenge over unilingual lieutenant-governor

Lt.-Gov. Brenda Murphy says she's determined to improve her French-language skills

 
Cassidy Chisholm · CBC News · Posted: Dec 23, 2019 5:28 PM AT




The office of Lt.-Gov. Brenda Murphy confirmed days after her appointment that she is learning to speak French. (Government of New Brunswick)

The New Brunswick Acadian Society has filed an application with the Court of Queen's Bench to challenge the recent appointment of Lt.-Gov. Brenda Murphy, who speaks only English.

"We want the federal government to ensure that on its list of federal appointments that require proficiency in both official languages, that' lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick' be on that list," said Ali Chiasson, the executive director of the New Brunswick Acadian Society.

New Brunswick is the only province that has two official languages, French and English.


Ali Chiasson, the executive director of the New Brunswick Acadian Society, said the organization wants the position of lieutenant-governor to have a bilingual representative. (Radio-Canada)




205 Comments 

David Raymond Amos
Surprise Surprise Surprise   
 

David Raymond Amos
Methinks Ali Chiasson, the executive director of the New Brunswick Acadian Society should ask Brenda Murphy if she is ever going to answer the letter and documents I delivered in hand to his cousin Herménégilde Chiasson's minions in 2004 when Kevin Vickers of the RCMP was his aide de campe while I was illegally barred from the parliamentary property during the time I was running in the election of the 38th Parliament N'esy Pas?
 

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @David Raymond Amos:
September 11th, 2004
Dear Mr. Amos,

On behalf of Her Excellency the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson,
I acknowledge receipt of two sets of documents and CD regarding corruption,
one received from you directly, and the other forwarded to us by the Office of
the Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick.

I regret to inform you that the Governor General cannot intervene in
matters that are the responsibility of elected officials and courts of Justice of
Canada. You already contacted the various provincial authorities regarding
your concerns, and these were the appropriate steps to take.

Yours sincerely.
Renee Blanchet
Office of the Secretary
to the Governor General”
 
 
David Raymond Amos
"The application also cited the Official Languages Act of Canada, which obliges the New Brunswick government to provide services in both English and French."

Methinks Ali Chiasson should send the lawyers acting on behalf of the New Brunswick Acadian Society to Federal Court in Fat Fred City and pull my files in order to verify that the illegal barring document is in one language only N'esy Pas?   
 
 

David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
Methinks Ali Chiasson is not having a great day N'esy Pas?  
 
 
 
David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
 "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Gov. Gen. Julie Payette are listed as the respondents in the application, but they have not filed responses with the court."

Methinks if their lawyers are wiseguys they would remove the matter to Federal Court in Fat Fred City then respond N'esy Pas?


 
 
David Raymond Amos
Methinks the SANB made a major Faux Pas I have no doubt whatsoever that many Anglos and Acadians will be discussing this ridiculous lawsuit over the Yuletide season and that not many will be impressed by the actions of the lawyers who dreamed it up N'esy Pas? 

Mack Leigh
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: Me thinks good ole Mikey has his fingers in this pie..

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Mack Leigh: Methinks its interesting that some of my replies to you just went "Poof" N'esy Pas? 
 
Mack Leigh
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: The liberals are out in full force at the CBC tonight.. Have to control the dialogue and suppress facts and opinions at every turn... 

David Raymond Amos 
Content disabled 
Reply to @Mack Leigh: Methinks we agree on that obvious fact but you must think it strange that they pressed delete when I teased you about being bitter and the comment was already "liked" a couple of times N'esy Pas? 
 



Guy Laplante
I thought NB was the only officially bilingual province of the country. I guess I am wrong.

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Guy Laplante: It is

Marilyn Carr
Reply to @Guy Laplante: we arnt bilingual...we have 75% english only population.

Mack Leigh 
Reply to @Guy Laplante: Correction NB is the only forced official bilingual province.. The people never had a say in this failed social engineering experiment... Billions wasted all in the quest of appeasing the Francophone Elite who are only interested in complete power and control of this province with language being their weapon of choice. 
 
Guy Laplante 
Reply to @Mack Leigh: You should learn French.



Marc Bourque
give her a chance and see from there ...

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Marc Bourque: Methinks that SANB has had lots of time to check my work while the lady has not been clued in at all N'esy Pas?




Peter C. Shearer
Gov't lawyers should be able to drag this out for oh say 5 or 6 years and bankrupt this society in the deal.
 
David Raymond Amos
Content disabled  
Reply to @Peter C. Shearer: Dream on

Theo Lavigne 
Reply to @Peter C. Shearer: Or sink the N.B. gov. further in the hole than we are now lol.

Cam Randal  
Reply to @Theo Lavigne: The quicker the province as well as the society are bankrupt, the better. Then we can all start over again with a clean slate. lol

David Raymond Amos
Content disabled  
Reply to @Cam Randal: Dream on

Mack Leigh 
Reply to @Peter C. Shearer: Shut down all of their preferential perks including all funding both provincially and federally... Nothing more than a big feeling lobby group that enjoys wasting taxpayers money and bullying ..'

David Raymond Amos 
Content disabled  
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: BINGO

Theo Lavigne
Reply to @Cam Randal: Dream on

David Raymond Amos  
Reply to @Theo Lavigne: Howcome you can say it but I cannot? 
 


Kyle Woodman
Oh boy. Here we go.

Theo Lavigne
Reply to @Kyle Woodman:Would you say Oh boy.Here we go if she only spoke French? I don't think so.

David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Kyle Woodman: Welcome to the Circus

Kyle Woodman 
Reply to @Theo Lavigne: I was referring to this being another wedge issue further inflaming both sides. I'm a bilingual anglophone. French immersion worked for me. It's not rocket science. Yet here we go again with a litany of useless arguing.

Theo Lavigne
Reply to @Kyle Woodman: I agree with you I took your comment the wrong way sorry . I'm also bilingual and this foolishness has got to stop.
 
Kyle Woodman 
Reply to @Theo Lavigne: most of my Acadian friends in my generation, born in the 80's, are appreciative of the fight their parents and grandparents made for linguistic rights. It's not something to take lightly. They will stand up and protect their rights if under threat. This petty language politics played out by out of touch boomers is a huge waste of energy though. It's equally bad on both extremes of the spectrum.



Cam Randal
Actions like this only turns some members of the majority against this group that pretends to act on behalf of the largest minority in the province.

Most likely, there is someone in the LG office who is fluent in "Acadian French". This is a waste of time and resources!


David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Cam Randal: Methinks the SANB lawyers and the Feds they hope to argue overlooked Federal Court File No T-1557-15 N'esy Pas?
 


JJ Carrier   
Content disabled
I was under the impression she was...So, a unilingual premier who used to be the youth star of CoR who panders to a anti-French party in the PANB to stay in government approved an English L-G who has never learned French in four decades of having a chance? You can't make this up...
 
Mack Leigh
Reply to @JJ Carrier: The office is full of fully bilingual employees so anyone is able to receive the service in french... This time someone was actually hired for their credentials and not solely on the fact that they are a francophone and speak french... Time to stop the pandering to one minority who have only 3 to 5 % of their community that are unilingual french speaking. The uniting language of the people of this province is English irregardless their mother tongue.. Time for common sense. We cannot afford this failed experiment called forced official bilingualism 
 
David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @JJ Carrier: Methinks that you overlooked the obvious fact that Trudeau The Younger our French Prime Minister from Quebec whose daddy dreamed up the "Charter" appointed the lady to speak and act on behalf of a British Queen N'esy Pas?

JJ Carrier   
Content disabled
Reply to @Mack Leigh: You have no resonance in 2019...Time to go back to the death of CoR to see how your ideas worked so well...

JJ Carrier   
Content disabled
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: Both are you are living in your own past...In David's case, 0.2 per cent of it...

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @JJ Carrier: Methinks everybody knows why you chickened out on your challenge to debate me in public during the last election N'esy Pas? 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: he is smart enough to know not to get into a issing contest with a kunk.

David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Methinks you forgot that he picked the fight not I N'esy Pas?

 
 
 
Mack Leigh
Content disabled     
When will government obtain the gonads to shut these self-serving elite down ?? All about their " rights " over and above those of everyone else... Time for the failed social experiment called forced frenchification to be shut down... We, as a province and as a country cannot afford the continued pandering to one minority.
 
David Raymond Amos 
Content disabled  
Reply to @Mack Leigh: Methinks many agree with you and the PANB N'esy Pas?  
 
Omer Samson
Content disabled  
Reply to @Mack Leigh: There is such thing as "forced frenchification" or "failed social experiment". The minority you refer to is well at home in NB and is not be "forced" into anything. 
 
 


Brian Robertson
Content disabled 
Every time these Acadian activists launch a legal challenge, the government should withdraw a percent of their funding.
Ingratitude for all that has been done to accommodate them should come with a price,

David Raymond Amos  
Content disabled 
Reply to @Brian Robertson: I concur

Mack Leigh   
Content disabled
Reply to @Brian Robertson: Shut down all of their funding both federally and provincially... Taxpayers money being used to fund their contentious and divisive lawsuits all in the name of forced social engineering and the marginalization of the majority who speak a multitude of languages.. The common language in this province and country is English and it is past time that government shut groups like this down.

Chantal LeBouthi: 
Content disabled 
Reply to @Brian Robertson:
What a load of crap  

Lou Bell
Content disabled
 Reply to @Chantal LeBouthi: Well put that between your teeth and chew it !




JJ Carrier
Content disabled 
Before the cliche racists here have the last say, let us remember that the hopes of the Anglo radical minority are the same as the Franco radical minority...Both are right wing parties of complainers, but one side speaks two languages will the other speaks in circa 1987 anti-McKenna rhetoric, hoping the re-birth of CoR via the PANB will fly in like a saviour...May you dance together in your own stubborn foolishness...And the L-G of a bilingual province should speak both of our unforked tongues, not one..

David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @JJ Carrier: Methinks you old Irving Media media dudes wish to forget why I ran as an Independent 7 times thus far. However anyone can Google the following words in order to review what Higgy's new buddy and an anti Cor dude published in 2005 and what your associates wrote about me in 2004 N'esy Pas?

Charles Leblanc gold found in Sussex 
 
Mack Leigh
Content disabled
Reply to @JJ Carrier: The " Anglos " are comprised of people of all cultures and languages. German, Italian, Arabic, Hebrew, Korean, Chinese, Indigenous, Indian, Russian, Scottish, Irish, Welsh and on and on yet there is only a small vocal group of one minority who demands the lion's share of everything. Self-serving bullies who think of no one other than themselves.. The cost to Canadians is massive and as Canada's poorest province we cannot afford to pander to one group only. We are all Canadians and as such no minority deserves any more or any less than another. Time for the pandering to come to a full stop. 




---------- Original message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, May 5, 2026 at 2:27 AM
Subject:
To: <govcarrier@hotmail.com>


http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/05/cra-signs-secret-settlement-with.html



Thursday, 30 May 2019

CRA signs secret settlement with wealthy KPMG clients involved in
offshore tax scheme


https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies


David Raymond Amos‏ @DavidRayAmos
 Replying to @DavidRayAmos @Kathryn98967631 and 48 others
Methinks the CRA and Harvey Cashore should review their emails N'esy Pas?


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/05/cra-signs-secret-settlement-with.html


#cdnpoli #nbpoli


 https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/cra-kmpg-settlement-taxes-1.5154610



CRA signs secret settlement with wealthy KPMG clients involved in
offshore tax scheme





2142 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.




David Amos
Methinks the Feds and KPMG or all theri lawyers and beancounters will
never explain how their actions generated this file long ago N'esy
Pas?

https://www.scribd.com/doc/2718120/integrity-yea-right



---------- Original message ----------
From: "Media Relations-PAB / Relation avec les médias-DGAP (CRA/ARC)"
<cra-arc.media@cra-arc.gc.ca>
Date: Thu, 2 Jan 2020 21:41:35 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Hey Sylvie Gadoury RE KPMG etc Methinks CBC
and the Justice Dept should know that I just got a call from John
Williamson's office (613 995 5550) Perhaps somebody should ask my MP
how that call concluded N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for contacting the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) Media
Relations team. Our office hours are Monday to Friday between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. (Eastern time).

Please note that if you are not a news reporter, your email will not
be addressed.

You can write to the Minister
here<https://apps.cra-arc.gc.ca/ebci/cjid/prot/ntr.action>.

If you wish to speak with a CRA agent, please use the phone numbers below.

1.             1-800-959-8281 (Individual tax enquiries)
2.             1-800-387-1193 (Benefit enquiries)
3.             1-800-959-5525 (Businesses and self-employed individuals)
4.             1-613-940-8495 (if calling from outside Canada/USA)

For other commonly used CRA phone numbers please visit our contact
page.<https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/corporate/contact-information/telephone-numbers.html>

For information on scams or to report deceptive telemarketing, contact
the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC) online at
www.antifraudcentre.ca<http://www.antifraudcentre.ca/> or toll free at
1-888-495-8501.

If you believe you may be the victim of fraud or have given personal
or financial information by mistake, contact your local police
service. For more information, go to
www.canada.ca/taxes-fraud-prevention<http://www.canada.ca/taxes-fraud-prevention>.

********************************************************************************************
Merci d'avoir contacté l'équipe des Relations avec les Medias de
l'Agence du revenu du Canada. Nos heures de service sont du lundi au
vendredi, de 9 h à 17 h (heure de l'Est).

Veuillez noter que si vous n’êtes pas un journaliste, votre courriel
ne sera pas traité.

Vous pouvez écrire à la ministre
ici<https://apps.cra-arc.gc.ca/ebci/cjid/prot/ntr.action?request_locale=fr_CA>.

Si vous souhaitez parler à un agent de l'Agence, composez l’un des
numéros de téléphone suivant:

1.             1-800-959-7383 (Impôt sur le revenu des particuliers)
2.             1-800-387-1194 (Prestations fiscales)
3.             1-800-959-7775 (Renseignments des entreprises)
4.             1-613-940-8496 (Appels provenant de l'extérieur du Canada et É-U)

Pour les autres numéros de téléphone courrant de l'Agence, veuillez
consulter notre page de
coordonnées<https://www.canada.ca/fr/agence-revenu/organisation/coordonnees/numeros-telephone.html>.

Pour obtenir des informations sur les fraudes ou le télémarketing
trompeur, contactez le Centre antifraude du Canada au
www.centreantifraude.ca<http://www.centreantifraude.ca/> ou en
composant le numéro sans frais 1-888-495-8501.

Si vous croyez avoir été victime d'une fraude ou si vous avez fourni
par erreur des renseignements personnels ou financiers, contactez
votre service de police local. Pour plus de renseignements, consultez
la page Protégez-vous contre la
fraude<https://www.canada.ca/fr/agence-revenu/organisation/securite/protegez-vous-contre-fraude.html>.

https://geds-sage.gc.ca/en/GEDS?pgid=015&dn=cn%3DCarr%5C%2C+Brandon%2Cou%3D92445-92445%2Cou%3D224-224%2Cou%3DHOC-CDC%2Co%3Dgc%2Cc%3Dca


Brandon Carr - Parliamentary Assistant
Telephone : 613-995-5550
Fax : 613-995-5226
249 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario  K1A 0A6
Canada
Organizations
Canada
House of Commons
Members of the House of Commons
John Williamson


---------- Original message ----------
From: "Carr, Jeff Hon. (ELG/EGL)" <Jeff.Carr@gnb.ca>
Date: Thu, 2 Jan 2020 21:40:03 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Hey Sylvie Gadoury RE KPMG etc Methinks CBC
and the Justice Dept should know that I just got a call from John
Williamson's office (613 995 5550) Perhaps somebody should ask my MP
how that call concluded N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I will be away from the office until January 6th, 2020.

Je serai absent du bureau jusqu'au 6 janvier 2020.


---------- Original message ----------
From: "Coon, David (LEG)" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>
Date: Thu, 2 Jan 2020 21:40:04 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Hey Sylvie Gadoury RE KPMG etc Methinks CBC
and the Justice Dept should know that I just got a call from John
Williamson's office (613 995 5550) Perhaps somebody should ask my MP
how that call concluded N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email. / Merci pour votre courriel.

I am currently out of the office. I will be back on Monday, January
6th. / Je suis hors du bureau.  Je serai de retour le lundi 6 janvier.

I will respond as soon as possible.  / Je vous répondrai dès que possible.

Please note that from December 23rd, 2019 until January 6th, 2020 the
Constituency Office for Fredericton-South will be closed. Emails and
telephone messages sent during this time will receive a response in
early January. The office will re-open Monday, January 6th. /
Veuillez noter que du 23 décembre 2019 au 6 janvier 2020, le bureau de
circonscription de Fredericton-Sud sera fermé. Les courriels et les
messages téléphoniques envoyés pendant cette période recevront une
réponse au début de janvier. Le bureau ouvrira le lundi 6 janvier.

If this is a media request for MLAs Megan Mitton or Kevin Arseneau or
myself, please call (506) 429-2285. / Pour toute demande de médias
avec les député.e.s Megan Mitton et Kevin Arseneau ou moi-même,
veuillez appeler le (506) 429-2285.

Have a safe and joyous holiday season! / Passez de joyeuses fêtes en
toute sécurité !

David Coon
MLA Fredericton South & Leader of the Green Party/
Député de Fredericton Sud et chef du Parti Vert



---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 2 Jan 2020 17:33:37 -0400
Subject: Hey Sylvie Gadoury RE KPMG etc Methinks CBC and the Justice
Dept should know that I just got a call from John Williamson's office
(613 995 5550) Perhaps somebody should ask my MP how that call
concluded N'esy Pas?
To: John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca, rob.moore@parl.gc.ca,
cra-arc.media@cra-arc.gc.ca, pierre.poilievre.a1@parl.gc.ca,
Chuck.Thompson@cbc.ca, steve.murphy@ctv.ca, David.Akin@globalnews.ca,
mcu@justice.gc.ca, David.Lametti@parl.gc.ca, news@dailygleaner.com,
nben@nben.ca, premier@gnb.camike.holland@gnb.ca,
blaine.higgs@gnb.ca, dominic.leblanc.c1@parl.gc.ca,
Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca, jeff.carr@gnb.ca, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
andre@jafaust.comGinette.PetitpasTaylor@parl.gc.ca,
Sherry.Wilson@gnb.ca, Ross.Wetmore@gnb.ca, megan.mitton@gnb.ca,
David.Coon@gnb.caKevin.A.Arseneau@gnb.ca,
Newsroom@globeandmail.comsturgeon.nathalie@brunswicknews.com,
nick.brown@gnb.ca, robert.mckee@gnb.ca, Kevin.Vickers@gnb.ca,
Tim.RICHARDSON@gnb.ca, Trevor.Holder@gnb.ca, rick.desaulniers@gnb.ca,
michelle.conroy@gnb.caMike.Comeau@gnb.ca, " carl.davies@gnb.ca,
carl.urquhart@gnb.caCathy.Rogers@gnb.ca, robert.gauvin@gnb.ca,
roger.l.melanson@gnb.ca, Roger.Brown@fredericton.ca,
ron.tremblay2@gmail.com
Cc: motomaniac333@gmail.com, jlrisdon@gmail.com,
govcarrier@hotmail.com, darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca,
sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.ca


---------- Original message ----------
From: Ministerial Correspondence Unit - Justice Canada <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 2019 17:35:08 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: KPMG
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Thank you for writing to the Honourable David Lametti, Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada.

Due to the volume of correspondence addressed to the Minister, please
note that there may be a delay in processing your email. Rest assured
that your message will be carefully reviewed.

We do not respond to correspondence that contains offensive language.

-------------------

Merci d'avoir écrit à l'honorable David Lametti, ministre de la
Justice et procureur général du Canada.

En raison du volume de correspondance adressée au ministre, veuillez
prendre note qu'il pourrait y avoir un retard dans le traitement de
votre courriel. Nous tenons à vous assurer que votre message sera lu
avec soin.

Nous ne répondons pas à la correspondance contenant un langage offensant.




---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 2019 13:35:02 -0400
Subject: Fwd: KPMG
To: John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca, rob.moore@parl.gc.ca,
cra-arc.media@cra-arc.gc.ca, pierre.poilievre.a1@parl.gc.ca,
Chuck.Thompson@cbc.ca, steve.murphy@ctv.ca, David.Akin@globalnews.ca,
mcu@justice.gc.ca, David.Lametti@parl.gc.ca
Cc: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com

https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/news/newsroom/media-contact-list.html

Media contact list – Canada Revenue Agency


General media email cra-arc.media@cra-arc.gc.ca
General media phone line 613-948-8366


Media Relations (National)


Media Relations (National) contacts

Etienne Biram 613-952-9184
Dany Morin 613-957-3522



Atlantic contacts

Melanie Terrio-Lamothe 902-426-6310



Quebec contacts

Julie Pronovost 514-283-2226
Frédérick Fink 514-283-2628



Ontario contacts

Paul Murphy 416-952-8105
Jelica Zdero 416-952-9883


Prairies (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Northwest Territories) contacts

TJ Madigan 587-475-3816
Joanne De Waal 306-517-0515
Randy Westerman 780-495-4771


Pacific (British Columbia and Yukon) contacts

Gurm Kundan 604-666-0457
Cheryl Yeung 604-666-9261
Heidi Hofstad 604-666-9389



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Min.Mail / Courrier.Min (CRA/ARC)" <PABMINMAILG@cra-arc.gc.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 Dec 2019 18:43:30 +0000
Subject: KPMG
To:

Dear Taxpayer:

Thank you for your correspondence regarding the KPMG case, which
attracted media attention. Thank you also for your understanding
regarding the delay of this response.

As Minister of National Revenue, my goal is to make sure the Canada
Revenue Agency (CRA) offers services that are fair, helpful, and easy
to use. This continues to be my priority and my focus as I devote my
efforts to delivering tangible results to taxpayers.

Although I cannot comment on a specific case, I can give you the
following general information. Settlements are concluded independently
from the Minister of National Revenue and the Minister's Office to
ensure the integrity of the tax system. They involve an independent
process within the CRA, in collaboration with the Department of
Justice.

In tax disputes, there is limited flexibility on settlement amounts
because CRA tax disputes are subject to the legal principles set out
in the Income Tax Act. The CRA is bound by the principles of tax law
and the rules arising from Canadian tax legislation. For example, when
a tax dispute involves an amount of $50,000, the taxpayer and the CRA
can agree on a lesser amount only if the determination of this amount
is based in law.

Settlements can also resolve tax issues that are not before the Court.
These settlements are carried out through an agreement called "minutes
of settlement," which is signed by a CRA official and the taxpayer.
Because this agreement is not public, taxpayers may see the use of
settlements as a lack of transparency. This is why I have asked the
CRA to review its procedures to find ways it can ensure greater
transparency regarding why it enters into settlements. Taxpayers
expect the tax system to be fair and equitable, and the CRA works
continuously to make sure that it is.

The CRA remains committed to combatting tax evasion and aggressive tax
avoidance. Individuals who participate in illegal tax strategies must
face the consequences of their actions, and taxpayers expect nothing
less.

I appreciate the opportunity to respond to your concerns and trust the
information I have provided is helpful.

Sincerely,





The Honourable Diane Lebouthillier
Minister of National Revenue





 

 

 
 
 
 

Interview with JJ Carrier

10425392_10154329610705088_1450494822597874936_nJJ Carrier was a staff reporter, and correspondent, for 45+ media outlets in the Maritimes and New England from 1986 to 2016, including more than a dozen publications in the Brunswick News media chain, based in Saint John, N.B.

The N.B.-based company includes numerous award-winning weekly and daily publications which represent the Campbellton, Moncton, Saint John, Bathurst, Fredericton, Woodstock, Sussex, Perth-Andover, Nackawic, Miramichi, Grand Falls, and Edmundston regions. As a staff contributor to these publications, he met daily and weekly deadlines for their print and on-line editions, encompassing up to 40 stories/columns, and accompanying photos, per week.

He has also freelanced for numerous radio and television outlets in Canada and the U.S., including CBC-Radio, and CBC-TV (The National/The Journal). He was also a guest contributor to Rogers TV’s community channel network in N.B. as an colour man/announcer, as well as a guest panelist for its highly-rated weekend call-in show It’s Your Call, which drew more than 15,000 viewers every Sunday from 2002 to 2008.

After a tenure at the Dalhousie News as a sports editor/staff member for eight years from 1986 to 1994, Carrier moved on to the Campbellton Tribune as a senior reporter (1994-2008) for the Restigouche East region when his previous paper merged with his new one.

His duties, as with the News, also included investigative (crime) reporting, political reportage of the municipal, provincial, and federal levels in Canada, community-based coverage, photojournalism, feature writing, entertainment coverage, business reportage, photo essays, advertising sales, and spot photography.

During his eight years as a News staff member/correspondent, the publication won five top newspaper prizes at the annual Atlantic Canadian Newspaper Awards (ACNAs). He was also recognized with his division’s 1993 ACNA Best Sports Coverage prize, and was runner-up in the category four times.

With The Tribune he won, or shared, numerous ACNA and regional prizes for news, sports, and photography, including the 2002 Sport NB Media Award, marking the first time a community reporter, and the first indigenous (Acadian Metis) scribe, won the provincial prize for excellence in amateur sports coverage.

While with The Tribune, Carrier also covered numerous national and international events, including a dozen sports at the 2003 Bathurst-Campbellton Canada Winter Games, national cross country skiing and biathlon events in Charlo at the Les Aventuriers venue, and an early 1990s Russia-Canada pre-Olympic hockey series.

A noted columnist, he has received international recognition for his Sportsfile sports column, his movie essay/history column Screen Shots, and his television column Remote Control, which reached 100,000 readers per week in a half-dozen publications and on-line sites, including groups as diverse as the Canada Media Fund, Wikipedia, and the CBC.

As a Brunswick News staff member, Carrier was promoted to be the new sports editor of the Bugle-Observer in Woodstock in 2008, a twice-weekly publication, where he joined an award-winning staff which eventually took home two more ACNA Best Newspaper awards from 2008 to 2011 and one Canadian Newspaper Award in 2010 for best publication in its category on the national level.

While with the Bugle-Observer, he had similar duties to his tenure with The Tribune, but he also took over editing and layout duties of its sister newspaper, The Advertiser.

After a tenure in semi-retirement after a successful three-year battle against diabetes/partial vision loss which began in 2013, which stymied his return as a media member, he returned as a freelance reporter in 2017 in hopes of continuing his career as a correspondent, columnist, or contributor on issues he is passionate about chronicling, for print or for on-line outlets.

A 2000 inductee to the Belledune (N.B.) Wall of Fame as a builder, he also has volunteered for more than 100 charities since 1973 in New Brunswick and Maine.

He was also the chairman of the Chaleur Local Service District in Restigouche East from 2003 to 2005, the largest LSD in the province of N.B., a region which entails more than a dozen communities.

Tell us about yourself.

As a child, What did you want to be when you grew up?   QB for the Cowboys…

What were you like at school?  Were you good at English? Advanced in all my classes, but my specialty was History and Current Events

What were three works of art – book or painting or piece of music, etc – you can now say, had a great effect on you and influenced your own development as a writer? SI, NFL Football and The Ring

 Why do you write? In my blood…

 Where do your ideas come from? Whatever inspires me in the moment…I also draw upon all my experiences and views for non-assignment work…

Describe your writing practices. 35-50 minutes at a time, with three edits every 10 minutes with that time frame…

What is the hardest thing about writing?  What is the easiest thing about writing? Hardest? I’m the only person who writes like me…Easiest? I’m the only person who writes like me…

Do you ever get writer’s Block?  Any tips on how to get through the dreaded writer’s block? No, but every writer has their own battles. Sticking to your vision helps.

 Any amusing story that happened to you as a writer? When one of my readers claimed someone else was writing my stories. I told them “go back to smoking your hash councilor…”

Do you think about readers and their reactions when you write? In journalism, of course. You need to connect with your audience.

What advice do you give aspiring writers? Keep writing every day. Rinse, recycle, repeat.

What were your 1-2 biggest learning experience(s) or surprise(s) throughout the publishing process? As a reporter, that you don’t own your copy and you can get sued for something published decades before if incorrect.

What would you have done differently if you could do it again? More chocolate breaks.

Something personal about you that people may be surprised to know? I have worked for three billionaires and interviewed three.

What is your favorite simple pleasure? Vintage CBC programs.

What is your favorite quote?  The truth as you wanna hear it? I can’t do that. You couldn’t afford me.

What’s next for you? Onward and upward.

Where can readers discover more about you and your work? JJ Carrier on Facebook and my YouTube channel at JJ (Governor) Carrier
 
 
 https://www1.gnb.ca/Elections/en/mun26may11/26may11generalmuncandidatelist-e.asp?ELECTIONTOWNID=120TOWNID22957
 
 

Maple Hills

Maple Hills
Position to fill# Positions to fill# CandidatesStatus
Mayor11(No Election)
Councillor at Large23(Election)
Councillor Ward 111(No Election)
Councillor Ward 211(No Election)
Councillor Ward 312(Election)

 

Maple Hills
NameOptional Contact Information
Mayor  (1 to elect)
Erica Warren
(inc./sort.)
(accl.)
Telephone : 506-988-0343
Email : jfwerica@gmail.com
Councillor at Large  (2 to elect)
Mark Estey
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-875-2430
Email : mark.estey@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/esteyatlarge
Benyamin (Ben) Jazebizadeh
Eric Murray
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-863-8802
Email : ericmurrayrealestate@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 1  (1 to elect)
David Gingras
(inc./sort.)
(accl.)
Telephone : 506-227-4119
Email : David4ward1@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 2  (1 to elect)
Chad Martin
(inc./sort.)
(accl.)
Telephone : 506-866-4598
Councillor Ward 3  (1 to elect)
Erica BulmerEmail : ericabulmer@outlook.com
Marc Savoie
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-874-1858
Email : acadianvy@gmail.com
 
 
 
 

Woodstock

Woodstock
Position to fill# Positions to fill# CandidatesStatus
Mayor13(Election)
Councillor Ward 112(Election)
Councillor Ward 212(Election)
Councillor Ward 312(Election)
Councillor Ward 4410(Election)
Councillor Ward 513(Election)

 

Woodstock
NameOptional Contact Information
Mayor  (1 to elect)
Trina Jones
(inc./sort.)
Email : hello@trinaformayor.com
http://trinaformayor.com
Noah J. WaltonEmail : n.walton.nb@gmail.com
Jeff WrightTelephone : 506-324-0637
Email : jlwright222@hotmail.com
Councillor Ward 1  (1 to elect)
May AtkinsonTelephone : 506-425-2529
Email : may.atkinson.pc@gmail.com
Michael Martin
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-325-0006
Email : mmmartin0610@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 2  (1 to elect)
Will Belyea
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-324-0564
Marlene HassardTelephone : 506-650-6568
Email : m.hassard@outlook.com
Councillor Ward 3  (1 to elect)
Catherine Anne DaviesTelephone : 506-325-0456
Email : robindown@hotmail.com
Scott DunlopTelephone : 506-325-8222
Email : scottdunlopward3@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 4  (4 to elect)
Ken AnthonyTelephone : 506-612-0752
Email : k.anthony60@icloud.com
Jeff Bradbury
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-425-3849
Email : firetruck67@icloud.com
Norm Brown
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-328-1818
Email : normbrown1234@gmail.com
John DolimountTelephone : 506-324-3098
Email : johndolimount@yahoo.com
Laura GaddasTelephone : 506-324-3664
Email : lgaddas@live.ca
Leslie Ann HawkesEmail : murphystella77@gmail.com
Christa McCartney
(inc./sort.)
Email : mccartneychrista@gmail.com
Mark Rogers
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-325-9033
Email : markdrogers4@gmail.com
Susan L. RyanTelephone : 506-612-0537
Email : susan.ryan@outlook.com
Arthur SlippTelephone : 506-325-8524
Email : arthurslipp@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 5  (1 to elect)
Robin AntworthTelephone : 506-425-4755
Email : robinantworth@hotmail.com
Keith BullEmail : keith.bull@rogers.com
Lorne Leech
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : 506-328-9830
Email : lbleech@nbnet.nb.ca
 
 
 
 

RCMP Investigating Municipal Election Sign Damage In Woodstock, N.B.

JJ (Governor) Carrier 
 
May 2, 2026
Trump stickers used to deface candidate's face on his 'stand ups', as police say they have a suspect in this confusing effort by the alleged criminal(s) in drawing attention to something which celebrates the 'fringes' of hatred and denies our democratic process
 
 
 
 

Why Provincial and Federal Party Reps SHOULD NOT Be Encouraged To Run In N.B. Municipal Votes

JJ (Governor) Carrier 
 
Apr 24, 2026
In 2026, we are seeing more and more prominent affiliates of the Liberals, PCs, Conservatives, NDP, Green and other parties run in mayoral and council races - a process that should be non-partisan, but is quickly turning into aspects of conflict of interest in several ways like we have in the States in numerous jurisdictions as to 'who owes who' if elected to represent the good citizens of a region
 

1 Comment

Who do you think you are fooling?
 
 
 
 

Canada's Royal Family - The Trudeaus - Remain As Beloved, And Hated, As They Ever Were

JJ (Governor) Carrier 
 
Apr 19, 2026
Pierre and his #1 son Justin have served decades as icons of the federal Liberals - leading Canada as its P.M. for a combined quarter-century since 1968
 
 
 
 
 
 

When The Confederation Of Regions Party (CoR) Invaded New Brunswick

JJ (Governor) Carrier 
 
Apr 21, 2026
The federal wing of the CoR party eventually drew big support in the Picture Province during its anti-bilingualism era, as high-profile politicians such as eventual PC Premier Blaine Higgs of Forest City (Lakeland Ridges), Brent Taylor, Arch Pafford and Danny Cameron all were involved with the right wing group in some way as either leaders, or mouthpieces, from the late 1980s to the early 2000s - further causing a divide along North-South political lines and causing 'scars' that remain as fresh as they were some four decades ago when all the drama of the future destiny of N.B started between the 'English' and 'French'
 

 



District of Carleton North

District of Carleton North
Position to fill# Positions to fill# CandidatesStatus
Mayor12(Election)
Councillor at Large25(Election)
Councillor Ward 113(Election)
Councillor Ward 214(Election)
Councillor Ward 313(Election)
Councillor Ward 412(Election)
Councillor Ward 512(Election)

 

District of Carleton North
NameOptional Contact Information
Mayor  (1 to elect)
Andrew Harvey
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 245-1444
Email : Andrewharvey506@gmail.com
Charles MacDonaldTelephone : (506) 324-4206
Email : macdonaldchas06@gmail.com
Councillor at Large  (2 to elect)
Laurel R. Bradstreet
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 425-7510
Email : laurel.bradstreet@gmail.com
Jayne GeddesTelephone : (506) 324-0494
Email : jaynegeddes2026@gmail.com
Karen Hargrove
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 391-5245
Email : zakandkarenhargrove@gmail.com
Kirby Lee JensenTelephone : (506) 323-9987
Email : kirbyjensen9@gmail.com
David TraffordTelephone : (506) 392-7171
Email : david.trafford@rogers.com
Councillor Ward 1  (1 to elect)
Nick AndersonTelephone : 5064060819
Email : officeforanderson@gmail.com
Lottie NyeTelephone : (506) 391-8975
Email : lottienye@hotmail.com
Michael Stewart
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 392-7399
Email : mjstewart20@outlook.com
Councillor Ward 2  (1 to elect)
Tammy Nicholson-KirklandTelephone : (506) 392-7902
Email : tammy.kirkland2018@gmail.com
Chris O'DonnellTelephone : 506-245-0038
Email : chris.odonnellward2@gmail.com
Connie SmithTelephone : (506) 245-0568
Email : connie.smith19@icloud.com
Chala Watson
(inc./sort.)
Email : chalawatson29@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 3  (1 to elect)
Stephen ArmourTelephone : 506-392-7187
Email : sarmour62@gmail.com
Ed BoydTelephone : 506-278-3893
Email : c.ed.boyd@outlook.com
http://voteboyd.com
Scott Oakes
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 391-5238
Email : ssoakes@hotmail.com
Councillor Ward 4  (1 to elect)
Jillienne L. DennyTelephone : (506) 391-8444
Email : jillienne@live.com
Ryan L. Dickinson
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 245-0098
Email : dickinson.ryan.5009@gmail.com
Councillor Ward 5  (1 to elect)
Gailen W. AllanTelephone : 506-246-5446
Email : gsgallan@nbnet.nb.ca
Angel Connor
(inc./sort.)
Telephone : (506) 245-0648
Email : adconnor@outlook.com