Unauthorized sandpiper statue in Dorchester ruffles feathers at council
Tantramar councillor sanctioned for efforts to replace deteriorating Shep without permission
A facelift for a beloved landmark in the small village of Dorchester has landed a local councillor in trouble.Shep, a giant semipalmated sandpiper, is perched on the main road in the village that sits between Moncton and Sackville, not far from the Nova Scotia border.
And he's hard to miss.
At 2.4 metres tall and weighing about 135 kilograms, or 300 pounds, it's a big statue of a tiny shorebird, made out of steel, fibreglass and epoxy.
The original wooden statue of Shep had to be taken down three years ago because of rot. (Submitted by Kara Becker)
The original wooden statue had begun to rot and was taken down three years ago. A replacement was ordered and set up on April 8.
But now the councillor who was responsible for the new bird is facing sanctions because council said it was commissioned without approval from the municipality.
On Tuesday evening, at the end of a Municipality of Tantramar meeting, a list of code of conduct violations by Coun. Debbie Wiggins-Colwell was presented.
At the mayor's request, Coun. Allison Butcher read the list of violations aloud, which included respecting the decision-making process, adherence to policies, procedures, and bylaws, respectful interactions with councillors, staff and the public, improper use of influence and use of municipal assets and services.
No further details about the violations were given. After reading out the list, Butcher said Wiggins-Colwell must attend training "to better understand her roles and responsibilities as an elected official."
Council said the violations were discovered after an outside investigation was ordered by the municipality into her actions. The statement at council said it retained a company called Montana Consulting to conduct that investigation.
Wiggins-Colwell did not respond to several requests for comment on Thursday.
But her business partner, Kara Becker, has spoke out. They run a gift shop in Dorchester.
"They dragged her through the mud for no reason. It's small town politics at it's finest," said Becker, who also served alongside Wiggins-Colwell as deputy mayor of Dorchester.
Becker said she believes Wiggins-Colwell acted in good faith, since Dorchester council had approved funding for a new statue before the amalgamation.
She added that Wiggins-Colwell had tried to get funding for the statue when the Tantramar council was first formed, but was unsuccessful.
"I'm sure they spent more on this investigation than that bird would have cost," Becker said.
Coun. Debbie Wiggins-Colwell was reprimanded by Tantramar council Tuesday evening for breaking seven points in the councillor code of conduct. (Municipality of Tantramar council livestream)
Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black would not comment on the issue, but said in an email that the independent report into Wiggins-Colwell was confidential and could not be shared. He also said that Tantramar was "still awaiting the invoice" for the cost of the investigation.
Neighbour made complaint
Next door to where the sandpiper sits is the former Dorchester jail, which has been converted into a museum and inn by owner Bill Steele.
Steele made a complaint against Wiggins-Colwell. He said he was all for the rotting statue being replaced, but it's how she went about it that bothers him.
"It's right outside my window, it's a great tourist draw. I was on them all the time, 'When are we getting the bird? When are we getting the bird?'" Steele said.
Bill Steele, owner of the old jail in Dorchester, made a complaint against Wiggins-Colwell. He says the commissioning of the new statue should have been put out for tender. (Tori Weldon/CBC)
He said he was told by a councillor on April 2 that the municipality had put forth a budget request to fix Shep, but nothing was happening.
That's why he was confused a week later, when he looked out his window only to see a new statue being erected.
"They said 'We got no money,' next thing you know the bird's being hoisted back up there off the back of some guy's pickup truck," Steele said.
When he started asking around, Steele said he discovered that Wiggins-Colwell was responsible for the bird's resurrection.
A screenshot from a video taken by Bill Steele on April 8 showing the new statue being installed. (Submitted by BIll Steele)
Steele said he was told the price for the replacement statue was $9,300. He said there should have been a tender go out for the commission of the new statue.
"That's a problem we can't have in municipal government, where you just kind of go and do your own thing, 'Hey, don't worry, I'll get it done.'" Steele said.
Now, Steele said he wants Wiggins-Colwell to resign.
Robin Hanson is the artist who got that commission. His studio is tucked back in the woods in French Lake, not far from Fredericton.
When reached Thursday, Hanson said Wiggins-Colwell commissioned the statue from him.
French Lake artist Robin Hanson created the replacement Shep, and said he was contacted about the project directly by Wiggins-Colwell and was paid directly by a donor. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
He said several people with connections to Dorchester had stepped forward to offer financial help, and Hanson said he was paid directly by one of these donors for his work. He said the payment did not come from the Municipality of Tantramar.
"It was very generous, there were many offers," Hanson said.
But despite the controversy around the councillor who commissioned him, Hanson said he stands by her decision.
"To me, she is the hero of the town. She did nothing wrong," Hanson said.
"Without her, there would be no Shep."
includes common law or what are unwritten statutes in Canadas constitution. Council as a whole by not calling the Mayor to accountability as violated custom. How about this?
You didn't know that the wards were for election purposes only. The public weren't told you were part of a hoax to give the appearance of local governance. But it's O.K. that Tantramar council is a competent group of individuals made incompetent by a command style of governance. Great example of this :-Anglophone East School District spent tens of thousands of dollars writing and rewriting the Code of Conduct to squash George Crossman and others. Money was even spent on police to investigate letters I sent to Minster of Rural affairs and the Minster of Education . All signed and copied to the appropriate people.
I see a class action developing here. Bad enough councilors picking on and suing each other , along with torts between departments. Council you need training. Everything you say in a regular meeting is suppose to be neutral, Just don't call each other liars because in a democracy that's the first thing that's honest.
Do you have wheelchair access to where I'm going to sit in the next election. I have a lot of questions. Verboten! Whoops! You cant even read your own reports. You know the big lie about how transparent you were going to be. Hypocrites!
Commissioned by former Dorchester village council, fate of sculpture now in hands of new municipal entity
Shane Fowler · CBC News · Posted: Mar 22, 2023 8:00 AM ADT
Ralston Cadman
Not a shock that the new mayor had no comment, much like his term as a former councillor. Ran on openness and this is what you the taxpaying voters now have. Heed warning when his handlers have him run for the provincial liberals in the next election, as this is what he’s being groomed to do.
Move comes less than a year before next municipal election so vacancy won’t be filled
Katie Tower | Posted: June 19, 2019, 1:40 p.m.
DORCHESTER, N.B. — Wayne Feindel has stepped down from Dorchester village council this week.
Feindel submitted his resignation to his fellow councillors on Monday, citing increased demands on the village by the provincial government as his top reason, as well as health and family commitments.
“Our village staff has the same demands as larger communities, and even though office staff has been doubled to two, they are creatures of the province with the same legal and fiduciary responsibilities as the larger centers with five times the staff,” he stated in his letter of resignation.
Feindel said he thinks it’s only fair to the remaining council members that he step down since he doesn’t feel he can accomplish what he would have liked with his remaining time on council.
Feindel, a retired teacher and principal, has been both a councillor and mayor for the village on and off since the 1980s. He has served on a number of boards and committees over the years and is also a past District Education Council member for the Anglophone East School District.
Mayor Jerome Bear said council accepted Feindel’s resignation “with regret” and thanked him for his longstanding service to local government and the community.
"To me, she is the hero of the town. She did nothing wrong," Hanson said.
The fat lady ain't sung yet
Bill Steele for Mayor of Dorchester
244 likes. New ideas, different approaches.
"It was very generous, there were many offers," Hanson said.
But despite the controversy around the councillor who commissioned him, Hanson said he stands by her decision.
"To me, she is the hero of the town. She did nothing wrong," Hanson said.
"Without her, there would be no Shep."
A giant sandpiper sculpture has returned to an N.B. town — but its fate is uncertain
A beloved local landmark has returned to Dorchester, N.B.
Hina Alam · The Canadian Press · Posted: Apr 10, 2023 8:45 AM ADT
Michael Cain
Robin Hanson has created some great pieces of art unique to New Brunswick. One would have thought the commissioning of the work, the removal of the old and the subsequent installation of the work, approved by previous authorities, would be respected without fanfare. A little paperwork is all that's required.
David Amos
Content Deactivated
Reply to Michael Cain
Dream on
Reply to David Amos
Why so secretive?
"Council said the violations were discovered after an outside investigation was ordered by the municipality into her actions. The statement at council said it retained a company called Montana
Consulting to conduct that investigation."
"Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black would not comment on the issue, but said in an email that the independent report into Wiggins-Colwell was confidential and could not be shared. He also said that Tantramar was "still awaiting the invoice" for the cost of the investigation."
David Amos
Montana Consulting were advised today about something their client failed to disclose
At the very least they know where they can read all my comments that cannot be found in the link below
Reply to Greg Windsor
Reply to Jos Allaire
People need to get a life and find something actually important to
complain about
David Amos
Reply to Mike tower
I second that emotion
SW Home
Tax payers money being well spent on life impacting decisions by this council. Be proud folks, your government hard at work
Reply to SW Home
Surely you jest
Horrors! "There's trouble in River City".
David Amos
Reply to Greg Miller
Par for the course
Ronald Miller
Gotta love it when people come from Ontario to NB and try to tell the locals from their newly adopted town how they should be behaving.
David Amos
Reply to Ronald Miller
Welcome to the circus in my old hometown
Graeme Scott
Small town politics. Big feelings over silly issues
David Amos
Reply to Graeme Scott
Bingo
Micheal Wilson
Leave the Sandpiper alone!!!! Leave him alone!!! I'm serious!
David Amos
Reply to Micheal Wilson
Me too
Galium Anderson
I am confused by the complainer's focus on a tender should have been
done, when it was done by donation in the first place? He wanted it to
cost tax payer dollars? He wanted to wait forever to get it done?
Seriously, he needs to give his head a shake.
MICHAEL O'DELL
Reply to Galium Anderson
So true absolutely agree
David Amos
Reply to MICHAEL O'DELL
Ditto
Mike tower
Reply to Galium Anderson
Amen Brotha
Reply to Mike tower
Marcel Belanger
So, the statue was paid for by an anonymous donor, therefore, no costs to the taxpayers.
The statue is a great tourist attraction, not in the category of the Shediac lobster but it’s still up there.
It seems the council is peeved because their refusal was circumvented and this is all just a "we’ll get you yet" revenge.
Dorchester has been neglected by the province for decades and now it will also be neglected by the Sackville council.
Marcel Belanger
Reply to Marcel Belanger
Also, the study into said councillors actions will actually cost the municipality as much of not more than the statue. Good sense at work!
David Amos
Reply to Marcel Belanger
Yup
Pete Lang
It's usually easier to get forgiveness than it is to get permission but it seems like there not much forgiveness in that little town.
David Amos
Reply to Pete Lang
It wasn't always that way
Cindy Sheppard
I'm not from the area nor do I have any interest in the bird, however, is anyone else noticing since the forced amalgamation of municipalities there are a lot of sanctions and code of conduct complaints; Hanwell, Minto/Chipman, Lakeland Ridges (Canterbury area) etc. Could it be that each little town was operating well on their own and are struggling with having to "share the sandbox" with neighbouring municipalities and towns? Maybe more time, training and thought should have been put into the forced amalgamation before assuming it would just work out.
Michael Cain
Reply to Cindy Sheppard
This government made decisions prior to consultation, a word they do not understand.
David Amos
Reply to Cindy Sheppard
I am happy that you noticed
John Smythe
Alternative article titles could be "Flipping the bird in Tantramar" or "Black days in Tantramar"!? Congrats for leadership and community support to Debbie!
David Amos
Reply to John Smythe
She is a player too
Lou Bell
Like with the Lakeland Regions Council and many others , the Councillors have no clue what their mandates are , nor seem to want to know .
Clive Gibbons
Reply to Lou Bell
Why don't you enlighten us?
David Amos
Reply to Clive Gibbons
Good luck with that
Mac Isaac
Reply to Mac Isaac
Reply to Andrew Martin
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
Reply to Dan Lee
Allan Marven
What a travesty ..that bird. I wouldn't sleep if it was here.
David Amos
Reply to Allan Marven
Yea right
Lorraine Morgan
I used to work for a municipality. Oh, how they hate it when things
actually get done!
David Amos
Reply to Lorraine Morgan
Of that I have no doubt
Fred indie
Snow pipers?
Michael Cain
Reply to Fred indie
Quite a story about the sandpiper on the marsh.
David Amos
Reply to Fred indie
Bagpipers don't care about the nonsense
Margaret Flowers
There’s far more to this story than meets the eye. A poisoned environment has been created by certain individuals post-amalgamation. They’ve had Coun. DWC in their cross-hairs for some time now, among other folks.
Clive Gibbons
Reply to Margaret Flowers
Lou Bell
Reply to Lou Bell
David Amos
Reply to Clive Gibbons
I believe you know the answer
Reply to Margaret Flowers
Posted on January 11, 2023 by brucewark
In a move that surprised many observers, Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black prevented council from electing a deputy mayor at its first meeting on Tuesday.
“We have just sat as the new council of the Town of Tantramar,” Black said.
“We have not had an opportunity to interact with one another. I would like us to be able to know each other and have an understanding of who we are as councillors and as council, before we make the decision of who would be the deputy mayor,” he added.
Black was responding to a motion from Councillor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell who sought to add the election of deputy mayor to Tuesday’s council agenda.
She pointed out that the bylaw governing council procedures requires it to elect a deputy mayor at its first meeting.
However, changing the agenda requires unanimous approval, and after all other councillors had voted to change it, Black asked clerk Donna Beal: “Do I vote as well?”
In the past, Sackville mayors have voted only to break council ties, but the new procedural bylaw imposed by the province allows the mayor to vote on every issue.
“I will vote nay,” Black declared defeating the motion to add the election of deputy mayor to council’s agenda.
Wilbur Ross
Classic NB.
David Amos
Reply to Wilbur Ross
Oh So True
Moncton, NB
E1C 2K2
His background prior to founding Montana in 2004 includes working as Corporate VP of Human Resources ‑- Irving Group Moncton, Corporate Director of HR for Frigidaire Canada, and HR Manager for Stelco Inc. He also held senior positions in health care. He was seconded to the Department of Health of Nova Scotia to provide high-level direction in labour relations, change management, governance, and organizational effectiveness to the Minister of Health during the mid-1990’s health care reform. Previously he was Director of HR for the 2000-employee Victoria General Hospital and coordinated labour relations for the transition of civil servants into the newly-created QEII Health Sciences Centre.
George played a pivotal role in the creation of the Canadian Council of Human Resources Associations and the establishment of a national standard for the CHRP designation. He was twice President of CCHRA, which represents more than 30,000 HR professionals across the country.
Raised in Canada, India, and Switzerland, he is a graduate of Queen's University, and began his career in public relations and communications before entering the HR field. He has instructed and lectured at UNB, Mount Allison University, St. Mary’s University, Dalhousie University, and in many labour law, human resources, and human rights conferences.
George is creator of the Turnaround Interview®, a highly effective method for coaching employees to break bad workplace habits without discipline. He is the recipient of the Atlantic Canada Human Resources Award (ACHRA) for Excellence in Human Resources, given by the HR associations of the Atlantic Provinces.
Maxime Labbé :
labbem@montanahr.com
(506) 863‑4965
Bringing more than 20 years of management experience in human resources and labour relations, Maxime is Montana's Managing Director. A graduate in Industrial Relations from Université Laval, he is a master trainer in both English and French. He relates well to any group, and brings warmth and enthusiasm to the many courses he has developed and taught.
Since joining Montana in 2009, Maxime has grown his client portfolio exponentially, allowing Montana to serve fully the francophone market. He was formerly the New Brunswick Senior Manager of Human Resources for Grant Thornton LLP, and worked in industrial relations for major manufacturers in Québec.
He is also in charge of training licensed instructors for Montana’s proprietary courses such as Turnaround Interview® and works closely with other clients to develop programs that meet their needs.
Besides training, Maxime specializes in conflict resolution, workplace assessments, organizational transformation, and labour relations.
Originally from St‑Rédempteur, Québec, Maxime lives in Dieppe, NB with his wife and his two children.
For the past few years, he has worked as an editor/proofreader for a prominent labour arbitrator, gaining familiarity with the principles underpinning labour law and collective bargaining relationships. Over the years, he has developed a sense of thoroughness, legal comprehension, and attention to detail, valuable assets for investigatory work and policy analysis in business.
Before joining Montana in 2018, Philippe was a project officer at the International Observatory on Language Rights at Université de Moncton as well as the Executive Director for the Association des juristes d’expression française du Nouveau‑Brunswick.
Monday, 10 April 2023
A giant sandpiper sculpture has returned to an N.B. town — but its fate is uncertain
YO Higgy I wonder if Mr Holland will explain to the folks in my hometown why I am laughing at how a big Fake Bird can ruffle a lot of fancy feathers in snobby Sackville
Mitton, Megan (LEG)<Megan.Mitton@gnb.ca> | Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 1:22 PM |
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | |
Thank you for your email. My office is closed for the statutory holidays and will reopen on Tuesday, April 11th, 2023.
Merci pour votre courriel. Mon bureau est fermé pour les jours fériés et ouvrira à nouveau le mardi 11 avril 2023.
Megan Mitton (elle
/ she, her)
Députée de Memramcook-Tantramar |
Responsable en matière de la santé, le logement, le changement climatique, et les droits humains. MLA for Memramcook-Tantramar | Advocate and Critic on files including Health, Housing, Climate Change, and Human Rights. Le Nouveau-Brunswick est situé sur les territoires traditionnels, non cédés des Mi’kmaq, Wolastoqiyik & Peskotomuhkati. | New Brunswick is situated on the unceded traditional territories of the Mi’kmaq, Wolastoqiyik & Peskotomuhkati. |
David Amos<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 1:19 PM |
To: "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, Andrew.Holland@natureconservancy.ca, Daniel.J.Allain@gnb.ca, "Holland, Mike (LEG)" <mike.holland@gnb.ca>, a.black@sackville.com, dan.murphy@umnb.ca, b.phinney@sackville.com, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "David.Akin" <David.Akin@globalnews.ca>, "bruce.wark" <bruce.wark@bellaliant.net>, jean-francois.leblanc@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, bbachrach <bbachrach@bachrachlaw.net>, TheBirdist@gmail.com, macxjack@gmail.com, hansonartgallery39@gmail.com | |
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, megan.mitton@gnb.ca, jborne@dorchester.com, d.beal@sackville.com, b.goodwin@sackville.com, m.beal@sackville.com, Eric.Hanson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca | |
https://davidraymondamos3. Monday, 10 April 2023 A giant sandpiper sculpture has returned to an N.B. town — but its fate is uncertain https://www.cbc.ca/news/ |
A giant sandpiper sculpture has returned to an N.B. town — but its fate is uncertain
A beloved local landmark has returned to Dorchester, N.B.
Residents of Dorchester, N.B., said they're delighted to see the return of the statue, locally dubbed "Shep," in honour of nearby Shepody Bay. But officials with the municipality to which the village now belongs said Dorchester's avian avatar was reinstalled without permission, throwing its ultimate fate into question.
For now, however, former deputy mayor Kara Becker said residents are glad to have a refurbished version of the semipalmated sandpiper statue watching over the local landscape after three years away.
Artist Robin Hanson spent two months building an eight foot tall semipalmated sandpiper. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
"She looks so beautiful," Becker said of Shep in a telephone interview. "She does look different than the last version of it. She's a bit more colourful, but she is just plump and ready for what's coming."
Standing
2.4 metres high and weighing 135 kilograms, the original incarnation of
Shep had a bird's-eye view of Dorchester for nearly 20 years. But when
the wooden statue began to rot three years ago, the village council
commissioned New Brunswick artist Robin Hanson to craft a more durable
version made of steel, epoxy and
fibreglass.
Shep's journey home got bogged down in what Becker described as red tape when the village became part of a new municipality earlier this year. The region of Tantramar took shape on Jan. 1 when Dorchester merged with Sackville and Pointe de Bute, and efforts to pay Hanson fell off the new council's priority list.
Kara Becker, former deputy mayor, said residents are pleased that Shep is back. (Submitted by Kara Becker)
Becker said media reports about efforts to reclaim Shep prompted several organizations to cover the costs with donations, noting one such group ultimately helped secure the sculpture's return.
"The community support was really incredible," she said.
Becker said Hanson offered to drive the statue up on Wednesday, but others were eager to have it back sooner.
In the end, Shep rolled back into town in the back of a truck on Saturday. But the new municipal authorities don't appear to share local enthusiasm for the new sculpture.
"The municipality of Tantramar and its council did not commission this work to be done nor request or approve the installation of this statue on municipally owned land," reads an emailed statement from Mayor Andrew Black.
When asked if the statue will be removed, Black said the issue won't be discussed until municipal offices reopen on Tuesday.
Shep will have one ally on Tantramar's Council — Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, who previously served as Dorchester's mayor. She said the town worked hard to bring the statue back, adding it's in keeping with the village's bird-friendly image and its location by the ocean.
The sandpiper statue that had sat in the community of Dorchester for years was an unofficial mascot of the community's annual summer sandpiper festival. (Submitted by Kara Feindel)
About $10,000 was spent on it but the big statue of the little bird props up the local economy and "brings in dollars that are many, many, many times over," she said.
Becker said she is afraid the statue might be relegated to a scrapyard or a storehouse.
"I'm so afraid they're going to try to remove her," she said.
Environmental advocates share her chagrin at the prospect, saying the statue could help raise awareness about a native species in decline.
Andrew Holland, spokesman for the Nature Conservancy of Canada, called semipalmated sandpipers a symbol of the upper Bay of Fundy.
About one-third of the world's semipalmated sandpiper population stops on the bay's mudflats for about three weeks toward the end of July where they get a break, rest and double their body weight before migrating to South America for the winter, he said.
The small birds, weighing about 20 grams, are listed as "near threatened" on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's red list.
About 30 per cent of the world's semipalmated sandpipers will come to the Upper Bay of Fundy each year. (Jordan Myles)
"(The statue) serves as a reminder of the importance of the area. That these shore bird populations have been in decline in Canada, and all around the world," Holland said. "And this is a critical home for migratory shorebirds.
Nick Lund, a network manager for U.S.-based conservation group Maine Audubon, also feels the statue serves an important environmental purpose.
"These are small birds that don't often hang out very close to people, and so are hard to see," he said. "Many people, if they see shorebirds at all, see them only as tiny specks off on the mud. I think for a lot of people this sandpiper statue might be the first time they can actually see one up close."
Becker said Sandpipers are not just the subject of a local annual festival, but stand as an important symbol of resilience due to their ability to fly thousands of miles despite their diminutive size.
"We didn't intend to ruffle feathers," she said with a laugh. "We just think we need our bird back."
Reply toJack Russell
Reply toJack Russell
A cat named Donald has been the talk of the town ever since he was adopted this summer
Miriam Lafontaine · CBC News · Posted: Dec 16, 2021 8:00 AM A
not the just the town 95% of the Human population ...
This is only a guess as well, but there were tables and chairs that belonged to now Tantramar that former Dorchester staff gave away without permission. I'm betting there might be some anger over "oh boy, not again".
I really don't see the municipality voting against a replacement Shep at all, the entire area benefits when tourists stop through when the sandpipers are here.
As usual, reality is a slave Lou's politics.
seems to create Classism or us vs them attitude, like almost instantly ... it is bizarre .. .
When asked if the statue will be removed, Black said the issue won't be discussed until municipal offices reopen on Tuesday."
Reply to David Amos
I think Canada's Oil is similar ... the Oil belongs to Canadians, it should not have been allowed to be sold to Private Corporations ...
kind of like the Canadian Governments making deals with WHO or WEF, it is not authorized ... they did not ask us if we mind a no-elected foreign body making policy for Canada and Canadians ... if it is not in the best interests of the people it is misrepresentations and, IMO, it should be Null and Void ...
Reply to Lou Bell
they could just say anything and do anything if that is the case and contrary to Justin Trudeau's behavior, that is not how it is supposed to work ...
Posted on January 11, 2023 by brucewark
In a move that surprised many observers, Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black prevented council from electing a deputy mayor at its first meeting on Tuesday.
“We have just sat as the new council of the Town of Tantramar,” Black said.
“We have not had an opportunity to interact with one another. I would like us to be able to know each other and have an understanding of who we are as councillors and as council, before we make the decision of who would be the deputy mayor,” he added.
Black was responding to a motion from Councillor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell who sought to add the election of deputy mayor to Tuesday’s council agenda.
She pointed out that the bylaw governing council procedures requires it to elect a deputy mayor at its first meeting.
However, changing the agenda requires unanimous approval, and after all other councillors had voted to change it, Black asked clerk Donna Beal: “Do I vote as well?”
In the past, Sackville mayors have voted only to break council ties, but the new procedural bylaw imposed by the province allows the mayor to vote on every issue.
“I will vote nay,” Black declared defeating the motion to add the election of deputy mayor to council’s agenda.
Your apology speaks well of you Too bad you didn't pick up the phone today eh?
Dorchester an explanation for removing the Statue
other than "needed permission to set it up ".
This decision makes no sense.
R.B. Bennett statue on its way to Ottawa
Artist Robin Hanson created statue to honour only prime minister from New Brunswick
CBC News · Posted: Jul 31, 2015 10:51 AM ADT
Bring back a well loved statue of a beautiful bird but because it was installed without permission it's awful. Humans suck.
Deja Vu Anyone?
Nature conservancy wants to help moose cross the Isthmus for Christmas
There are about 29,000 moose in New Brunswick, but only about 1,000 in mainland Nova Scotia
CBC News · Posted: Dec 23, 2015 8:45 AM AST
YO Joe Tacopina I just called FYI 20 Years ago today the US Secret Service threatened to take me to GITMO 2 years ago tomorrow the US Naval Intelligence called me then offended me
David Amos<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | Sat, Apr 1, 2023 at 12:44 PM |
To: info@tacopinalaw.com, NIA_IG@navy.mil, FOIL@dany.nyc.gov, contact@win.donaldjtrump.com, donjr@email.donjr.com, mdcohen212@gmail.com, "Diane.Lebouthillier" <Diane.Lebouthillier@cra-arc.gc.ca>, "mark.vespucci" <mark.vespucci@ci.irs.gov>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, premier <premier@gnb.ca>, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, "Matt.DeCourcey" <Matt.DeCourcey@parl.gc.ca>, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>, washington field <washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>, "David.Coon" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>, "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "sylvie.gadoury" <sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.ca>, "pierre.poilievre" <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, "Katie.Telford" <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>, "jagmeet.singh" <jagmeet.singh@parl.gc.ca>, "Marco.Mendicino" <Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, "martin.gaudet" <martin.gaudet@fredericton.ca>, "Mark.Blakely" <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>, justmin <justmin@gov.ns.ca>, paulpalango <paulpalango@protonmail.com>, premier <premier@gov.pe.ca>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, premier <premier@gov.bc.ca>, premier <premier@gov.nl.ca>, premier <premier@gov.yk.ca>, premier <premier@gov.nt.ca>, Office of the Premier <scott.moe@gov.sk.ca>, premier <premier@leg.gov.mb.ca> | |
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, jfetzer <jfetzer@d.umn.edu>, John Furey <JohnFurey@fureylegal.com>, "Mike.Comeau" <Mike.Comeau@gnb.ca>, Pat.Morris@opp.ca, "Michael.Duheme" <Michael.Duheme@rcmp-grc.gc.ca> | |
https://davidraymondamos3. Friday, 2 April 2021 Russia warns NATO against deploying troops to Ukraine ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: NIA_IG <nia_ig.fct@navy.mil> Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2021 11:03:08 +0000 Subject: RE: [Non-DoD Source] Fwd: Methinks the evil lawyer Howie Cooper made a deal with the VERY NASTY FBI dudes in Beantown N'esy Pas Howie Anglin? To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail. Dear David Amos, The Naval Intelligence Activity (NIA) Office of the Inspector General (IG) reviewed your email and attached .WAV file provided to the NIA Hotline on 2 April 2021. I found no connection to the United States Navy or United States Naval Intelligence. Naval Inspectors General exist to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of US Navy Programs, and strive to eliminate and prevent waste, fraud, and abuse with their respective departments. Naval IGs are restricted to assessing matters falling within the purview of their respective commanders. Citing the lack of an apparent connection to the US Navy or Naval Intelligence, I am unable to provide further assistance, or provide direct referral to any other agency or activity. Sincerely, Mark Koneda Investigator Naval Intelligence Activity Office of the Inspector General NIA_IG@navy.mil (301)669-3030 (unclass) TSVOIP 560-3030 INSPECTOR GENERAL SENSITIVE INFORMATION - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The information contained in this email and any accompanying attachments may contain Inspector General sensitive or pre-decisional information, which is protected from mandatory disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA, 5 USC Section 552). It should not be released to unauthorized persons. If you are not the intended recipient of this information, any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in reliance on this information is prohibited. If you received this email in error, please notify this office by email or by calling (301) 669-3030. >>> ---------- Original message ---------- >>> From: "McGrath, Stephen T" <Stephen.McGrath@novascotia.ca >>> Date: Sat, 8 Sep 2018 12:40:22 +0000 >>> Subject: Automatic reply: Does anyone recall the email entitled "So >>> Stephen McGrath if not you then just exactly who sent me this latest >>> email from your office?" >>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> >>> >>> Thanks for your message, however I am no longer at the Department of >>> Justice, and this email account is not being monitored. >>> >>> Please contact Kim Fleming at Kim.Fleming@novascotia.ca (phone >>> 902-424-4023), or Vicky Zinck at Victoria.Zinck@novascotia.ca (phone >>> 902-424-4390). Kim and Vicky will be able to redirect you. >>> >>> >>> >>> ---------- Original message ---------- >>> From: Justice Website <JUSTWEB@novascotia.ca> >>> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 14:21:11 +0000 >>> Subject: Emails to Department of Justice and Province of Nova Scotia >>> To: "motomaniac333@gmail.com" <motomaniac333@gmail.com> >>> >>> Mr. Amos, >>> We acknowledge receipt of your recent emails to the Deputy Minister of >>> Justice and lawyers within the Legal Services Division of the >>> Department of Justice respecting a possible claim against the Province >>> of Nova Scotia. Service of any documents respecting a legal claim >>> against the Province of Nova Scotia may be served on the Attorney >>> General at 1690 Hollis Street, Halifax, NS. Please note that we will >>> not be responding to further emails on this matter. >>> >>> Department of Justice >>> >>> >>> >>> ---------- Original message ---------- >>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com >>> Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2017 15:16:38 -0400 >>> Subject: Attn Laura Lee Langley, Karen Hudson and Joanne Munro I just >>> called all three of your offices to inform you of my next lawsuit >>> against Nova Scotia >>> To: LauraLee.Langley@novascotia.ca >>> Joanne.Munro@novascotia.ca >>> Cc: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com >>> >>> https://novascotia.ca/exec_ >>> >>> https://novascotia.ca/exec_ >>> >>> Laura Lee Langley >>> 1700 Granville Street, 5th Floor >>> One Government Place >>> Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 1X5 >>> Phone: (902) 424-8940 >>> Fax: (902) 424-0667 >>> Email: LauraLee.Langley@novascotia.ca >>> >>> https://novascotia.ca/just/ >>> >>> Karen Hudson Q.C. >>> 1690 Hollis Street, 7th Floor >>> Joseph Howe Building >>> Halifax, NS B3J 3J9 >>> Phone: (902) 424-4223 >>> Fax: (902) 424-0510 >>> Email: Karen.Hudson@novascotia.ca >>> >>> https://novascotia.ca/sns/ceo. >>> >>> Joanne Munro: >>> 1505 Barrington Street, 14-South >>> Maritime Centre >>> Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 3K5 >>> Phone: (902) 424-4089 >>> Fax: (902) 424-5510 >>> Email: Joanne.Munro@novascotia.ca >>> >>> If you don't wish to speak to me before I begin litigation then I >>> suspect the Integrity Commissioner New Brunswick or the Federal Crown >>> Counsel can explain the email below and the documents hereto attached >>> to you and your Premier etc. >>> >>> Veritas Vincit >>> David Raymond Amos >>> 902 800 0369 >>> >>> >>> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com >>> Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2017 09:32:09 -0400 >>> Subject: Attn Integrity Commissioner Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C., >>> To: coi@gnb.ca >>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com >>> >>> Good Day Sir >>> >>> After I heard you speak on CBC I called your office again and managed >>> to speak to one of your staff for the first time >>> >>> Please find attached the documents I promised to send to the lady who >>> answered the phone this morning. Please notice that not after the Sgt >>> at Arms took the documents destined to your office his pal Tanker >>> Malley barred me in writing with an "English" only document. >>> >>> These are the hearings and the dockets in Federal Court that I >>> suggested that you study closely. >>> >>> This is the docket in Federal Court >>> >>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj. >>> >>> These are digital recordings of the last three hearings >>> >>> Dec 14th https://archive.org/details/ >>> >>> January 11th, 2016 https://archive.org/details/ >>> >>> April 3rd, 2017 >>> >>> https://archive.org/details/ >>> >>> >>> This is the docket in the Federal Court of Appeal >>> >>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj. >>> >>> >>> The only hearing thus far >>> >>> May 24th, 2017 >>> >>> https://archive.org/details/ >>> >>> >>> This Judge understnds the meaning of the word Integrity >>> >>> Date: 20151223 >>> >>> Docket: T-1557-15 >>> >>> Fredericton, New Brunswick, December 23, 2015 >>> >>> PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell >>> >>> BETWEEN: >>> >>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS >>> >>> Plaintiff >>> >>> and >>> >>> HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN >>> >>> Defendant >>> >>> ORDER >>> >>> (Delivered orally from the Bench in Fredericton, New Brunswick, on >>> December 14, 2015) >>> >>> The Plaintiff seeks an appeal de novo, by way of motion pursuant to >>> the Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98-106), from an Order made on November >>> 12, 2015, in which Prothonotary Morneau struck the Statement of Claim >>> in its entirety. >>> >>> At the outset of the hearing, the Plaintiff brought to my attention a >>> letter dated September 10, 2004, which he sent to me, in my then >>> capacity as Past President of the New Brunswick Branch of the Canadian >>> Bar Association, and the then President of the Branch, Kathleen Quigg, >>> (now a Justice of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal). In that letter >>> he stated: >>> >>> As for your past President, Mr. Bell, may I suggest that you check the >>> work of Frank McKenna before I sue your entire law firm including you. >>> You are your brother’s keeper. >>> >>> Frank McKenna is the former Premier of New Brunswick and a former >>> colleague of mine at the law firm of McInnes Cooper. In addition to >>> expressing an intention to sue me, the Plaintiff refers to a number of >>> people in his Motion Record who he appears to contend may be witnesses >>> or potential parties to be added. Those individuals who are known to >>> me personally, include, but are not limited to the former Prime >>> Minister of Canada, The Right Honourable Stephen Harper; former >>> Attorney General of Canada and now a Justice of the Manitoba Court of >>> Queen’s Bench, Vic Toews; former member of Parliament Rob Moore; >>> former Director of Policing Services, the late Grant Garneau; former >>> Chief of the Fredericton Police Force, Barry McKnight; former Staff >>> Sergeant Danny Copp; my former colleagues on the New Brunswick Court >>> of Appeal, Justices Bradley V. Green and Kathleen Quigg, and, retired >>> Assistant Commissioner Wayne Lang of the Royal Canadian Mounted >>> Police. >>> >>> In the circumstances, given the threat in 2004 to sue me in my >>> personal capacity and my past and present relationship with many >>> potential witnesses and/or potential parties to the litigation, I am >>> of the view there would be a reasonable apprehension of bias should I >>> hear this motion. See Justice de Grandpré’s dissenting judgment in >>> Committee for Justice and Liberty et al v National Energy Board et al, >>> [1978] 1 SCR 369 at p 394 for the applicable test regarding >>> allegations of bias. In the circumstances, although neither party has >>> requested I recuse myself, I consider it appropriate that I do so. >>> >>> >>> AS A RESULT OF MY RECUSAL, THIS COURT ORDERS that the Administrator of >>> the Court schedule another date for the hearing of the motion. There >>> is no order as to costs. >>> >>> “B. Richard Bell” >>> Judge >>> >>> >>> Below after the CBC article about your concerns (I made one comment >>> already) you will find the text of just two of many emails I had sent >>> to your office over the years since I first visited it in 2006. >>> >>> I noticed that on July 30, 2009, he was appointed to the the Court >>> Martial Appeal Court of Canada Perhaps you should scroll to the >>> bottom of this email ASAP and read the entire Paragraph 83 of my >>> lawsuit now before the Federal Court of Canada? >>> >>> "FYI This is the text of the lawsuit that should interest Trudeau the >>> most >>> >>> http://davidraymondamos3. >>> >>> 83 The Plaintiff states that now that Canada is involved in more war >>> in Iraq again it did not serve Canadian interests and reputation to >>> allow Barry Winters to publish the following words three times over >>> five years after he began his bragging: >>> >>> January 13, 2015 >>> This Is Just AS Relevant Now As When I wrote It During The Debate >>> >>> December 8, 2014 >>> Why Canada Stood Tall! >>> >>> Friday, October 3, 2014 >>> Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And >>> Stupid Justin Trudeau? >>> >>> >>> Vertias Vincit >>> David Raymond Amos >>> 902 800 0369 >>> >>> P.S. Whereas this CBC article is about your opinion of the actions of >>> the latest Minister Of Health trust that Mr Boudreau and the CBC have >>> had my files for many years and the last thing they are is ethical. >>> Ask his friends Mr Murphy and the RCMP if you don't believe me. >>> >>> Subject: >>> Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 12:02:35 -0400 >>> From: "Murphy, Michael B. \(DH/MS\)" MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca >>> To: motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com >>> >>> January 30, 2007 >>> >>> WITHOUT PREJUDICE >>> >>> Mr. David Amos >>> >>> Dear Mr. Amos: >>> >>> This will acknowledge receipt of a copy of your e-mail of December 29, >>> 2006 to Corporal Warren McBeath of the RCMP. >>> >>> Because of the nature of the allegations made in your message, I have >>> taken the measure of forwarding a copy to Assistant Commissioner Steve >>> Graham of the RCMP “J” Division in Fredericton. >>> >>> Sincerely, >>> >>> Honourable Michael B. Murphy >>> Minister of Health >>> >>> CM/cb >>> >>> >>> Warren McBeath warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca wrote: >>> >>> Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:34:53 -0500 >>> From: "Warren McBeath" warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca >>> To: kilgoursite@ca.inter.net, MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca, >>> nada.sarkis@gnb.ca, wally.stiles@gnb.ca, dwatch@web.net, >>> motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com >>> CC: ottawa@chuckstrahl.com, riding@chuckstrahl.com,John. >>> Oda.B@parl.gc.ca,"Bev BUSSON" bev.busson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, >>> "Paul Dube" PAUL.DUBE@rcmp-grc.gc.ca >>> Subject: Re: Remember me Kilgour? Landslide Annie McLellan has >>> forgotten me but the crooks within the RCMP have not >>> >>> Dear Mr. Amos, >>> >>> Thank you for your follow up e-mail to me today. I was on days off >>> over the holidays and returned to work this evening. Rest assured I >>> was not ignoring or procrastinating to respond to your concerns. >>> >>> As your attachment sent today refers from Premier Graham, our position >>> is clear on your dead calf issue: Our forensic labs do not process >>> testing on animals in cases such as yours, they are referred to the >>> Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown who can provide these >>> services. If you do not choose to utilize their expertise in this >>> instance, then that is your decision and nothing more can be done. >>> >>> As for your other concerns regarding the US Government, false >>> imprisonment and Federal Court Dates in the US, etc... it is clear >>> that Federal authorities are aware of your concerns both in Canada >>> the US. These issues do not fall into the purvue of Detachment >>> and policing in Petitcodiac, NB. >>> >>> It was indeed an interesting and informative conversation we had on >>> December 23rd, and I wish you well in all of your future endeavors. >>> >>> Sincerely, >>> >>> Warren McBeath, Cpl. >>> GRC Caledonia RCMP >>> Traffic Services NCO >>> Ph: (506) 387-2222 >>> Fax: (506) 387-4622 >>> E-mail warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca >>> >>> >>> http://www.archive.org/ >>> >>> http://www.archive.org/ >>> >>> >>> FEDERAL EXPRES February 7, 2006 >>> Senator Arlen Specter >>> United States Senate >>> Committee on the Judiciary >>> 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building >>> Washington, DC 20510 >>> >>> Dear Mr. Specter: >>> >>> I have been asked to forward the enclosed tapes to you from a man >>> named, David Amos, a Canadian citizen, in connection with the matters >>> raised in the attached letter. Mr. Amos has represented to me that >>> these are illegal FBI wire tap tapes. I believe Mr. Amos has been in >>> contact >>> with you about this previously. >>> >>> Very truly yours, >>> Barry A. Bachrach >>> Direct telephone: (508) 926-3403 >>> Direct facsimile: (508) 929-3003 >>> Email: bbachrach@bowditch.com >>> >>> >>> >>> Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C., >>> Office of the Integrity Commissioner >>> Edgecombe House, 736 King Street >>> Fredericton, N.B. CANADA E3B 5H1 >>> tel.: 506-457-7890 >>> fax: 506-444-5224 >>> e-mail:coi@gnb.ca >>> >>> Hon. Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C. >>> Integrity Commissioner |
I called Tobias Paul (506) 295-3034 to talk about Donald He shut me down after wondering how I got his number So now I will talk about HIM
NBEUB/CESPNB<General@nbeub.ca> | Mon, Dec 20, 2021 at 8:18 AM |
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | |
Thank you for your email to the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board. This is to acknowledge receipt of the information you have filed with the Board. La Commission de l’énergie et des services publics du Nouveau-Brunswick vous remercie pour votre courriel. Nous accusons réception de l’information que vous avez déposée auprès de la Commission. Sarah Thebeau Administrative Assistant / Assistante administrative (506) 658-2504 (Reception) (506) 658-2711 (Direct) Confidentiality Notice This private message (and any attachments) is for the exclusive use of the individual for whom, or entity for which, it is intended. It may contain information that is privileged, confidential or exempt from disclosure by law. Its author does not waive the protection afforded to it under applicable law. Disclosure to anyone other than the intended recipient does not constitute waiver of privilege. Its possession or usage, by any person other than the one for whom it is intended, is not authorized by its author and is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately, at our expense, by telephone at (506) 658-2504. Also, if you received this email in error, delete it and any attachments from your computer system and records. Thank you. Avis de confidentialité Ce message privé (et toutes les pièces jointes) est à l'usage exclusif de la personne pour laquelle ou entité pour laquelle, il est destiné. Il peut contenir des informations qui sont personnelles, confidentielles ou exemptées de la divulgation par la loi. Son auteur ne renonce pas à la protection accordée en vertu de la loi applicable. Sa divulgation à toute personne autre que son destinataire ne constitue pas une renonciation de privilège. Sa possession ou l'utilisation, par une personne autre que celle pour laquelle il est destiné, n'est pas autorisée par son auteur et est strictement interdite. Si vous recevez cette communication par erreur, veuillez nous appeler dans les plus brefs délais, à frais virés, au (506) 658-2504. Aussi, si vous avez reçu ce courriel par erreur, veuillez effacer ce courriel, ainsi que les pièces jointes, de votre système informatique et de vos dossiers. Merci. -----Original Message----- From: David Amos [mailto:david.raymond.amos333@ Sent: Friday, December 17, 2021 7:09 PM To: barnyardbicycles@gmail.com; s.mesheau@sackville.com; bagtownbrewing@gmail.com; miriam.lafontaine@cbc.ca; bruce.wark@bellaliant.net; Mitton, Megan (LEG) <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>; steve.murphy <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>; sheilagunnreid <sheilagunnreid@gmail.com>; Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>; dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca; pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>; Katie.Telford <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>; Kevin.leahy <Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>; Ian.Shugart <Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca>; info <info@gg.ca>; editor <editor@wikileaks.org>; station@chmafm.com; andrew <andrew@frankmagazine.ca>; NBEUB/CESPNB <General@nbeub.ca>; news-tips <news-tips@nytimes.com>; a.black@sackville.com; a.butcher@sackville.com; s.dietz@sackville.com; m.estabrooks@sackville.com; b.evans@sackville.com; k.hicks@sackville.com; b.phinney@sackville.com; m.tower@sackville.com Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>; blaine.higgs <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>; dominic.cardy@gnb.ca; Daniel.J.Allain <Daniel.J.Allain@gnb.ca>; hugh.flemming <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>; oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>; andrea.anderson-mason <andrea.anderson-mason@gnb.ca> Subject: Re: I called Tobias Paul (506) 295-3034 to talk about Donald He shut me down after wondering how I got his number So now I will talk about HIM https://davidraymondamos3. Friday, 17 December 2021 Celebrity cat in Sackville prompting debate and demands for animal bylaw changes ---------- Orignal message ---------- From: Barnyard Bicycles <barnyardbicycles@gmail.com> Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2021 17:27:44 -0400 Subject: Re: I called Tobias Paul (506) 295-3034 to talk about Donald He shut me down after wondering how I got his number So now I will talk about HIM To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail. Hi David, My cat is just fine thanks. I hope you get the help you need, Thanks, Tobias Paul Barnyard Bicycles (506) 295 3034 ---------- Original message ---------- From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca> Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2021 21:04:05 +0000 Subject: RE: I called Tobias Paul (506) 295-3034 to talk about Donald He shut me down after wondering how I got his number So now I will talk about HIM To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail. Hello, Thank you for taking the time to write. Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed at the earliest opportunity. If your inquiry more appropriately falls within the mandate of a Ministry or other area of government, staff will refer your email for review and consideration. Merci d'avoir pris le temps de nous écrire. En raison du volume des messages reçus, cette réponse automatique vous informe que votre courriel a été reçu et sera examiné dans les meilleurs délais. Si votre demande relève plutôt du mandat d'un ministère ou d'un autre secteur du gouvernement, le personnel vous renverra votre courriel pour examen et considération. If this is a Media Request, please contact the Premier’s office at (506) 453-2144 or by email media-medias@gnb.ca<mailto:med S’il s’agit d’une demande des médias, veuillez communiquer avec le Cabinet du premier ministre au 506-453-2144. Office of the Premier/Cabinet du premier ministre P.O Box/C. P. 6000 Fredericton New-Brunswick/Nouveau- Email/Courriel: premier@gnb.ca/premier. |
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2021 17:02:17 -0400
Subject: I called Tobias Paul (506) 295-3034 to talk about Donald He
shut me down after wondering how I got his number So now I will talk
about HIM
To: barnyardbicycles@gmail.com, s.mesheau@sackville.com,
bagtownbrewing@gmail.com, miriam.lafontaine@cbc.ca,
bruce.wark@bellaliant.net, "Mitton, Megan (LEG)"
<megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
sheilagunnreid <sheilagunnreid@gmail.com>, Newsroom
<Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca, pm
<pm@pm.gc.ca>, "Katie.Telford" <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>,
"Kevin.leahy" <Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Ian.Shugart"
<Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, info <info@gg.ca>, editor
<editor@wikileaks.org>, station@chmafm.com, andrew
<andrew@frankmagazine.ca>, NBEUB/CESPNB <general@nbeub.ca>, news-tips
<news-tips@nytimes.com>, a.black@sackville.com,
a.butcher@sackville.com, s.dietz@sackville.com,
m.estabrooks@sackville.com, b.evans@sackville.com,
k.hicks@sackville.com, b.phinney@sackville.com, m.tower@sackville.com
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "blaine.higgs"
<blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, dominic.cardy@gnb.ca, "Daniel.J.Allain"
<Daniel.J.Allain@gnb.ca>, "hugh.flemming" <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>,
oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, "andrea.anderson-mason"
<andrea.anderson-mason@gnb.ca>
Need I say DUHHH??
Perhaps Tobias Paul should have listened to me then printed this file
in oe to protect his dumb cat
https://www.scribd.com/doc/
Check out pages 1, 2, 13 and 14 Go figure why CBC continues to play dumb
https://www.banking.senate.
The Committee will meet in OPEN SESSION to conduct the second in a
series of hearings on the “Review of Current Investigations and
Regulatory Actions Regarding the Mutual Fund Industry.”
Witness Panel 1
Mr. Stephen M. Cutler
Director - Division of Enforcement
Securities and Exchange Commission
Cutler - November 20, 2003
Mr. Robert Glauber
Chairman and CEO
National Association of Securities Dealers
Glauber - November 20, 2003
Eliot Spitzer
Attorney General
State of New York
Methinks the effect of Bill 82 on my old stomping grounds and the
doings in the local hospital (where I spent over a month in a comma
long before my cousin Madame Mitton was born) are far more newsworthy
than the actions of an old stray cat and the concerns of its nasty
owner N'esy Pas Mr Wark?
I have no doubt the Bagtown Brewing Company is enjoying the free
advertising financed by the the Canadian taxpayers
BTW Merry Xmass
Please enjoy watching the clowns performing in Higgy's circus today
https://legnb.ca/en/webcasts/
60th Legislature | 1st Session | Daily Sitting #62
December 17, 2021
Related Media
Order Paper (PDF)
Download Webcast (MP4)
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
Celebrity cat in Sackville prompting debate and demands for animal bylaw changes
A cat named Donald has been the talk of the town ever since he was adopted this summer
Refer to your local police for information about criminal record
checks. If the RCMP is your local police, use the RCMP locator to find
an RCMP detachment near you.
RCMP Sussex New Brunswick
>>> Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 12:02:35 -0400
>>> From: "Murphy, Michael B. \(DH/MS\)" MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca
>>> To: motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>>>
>>> January 30, 2007
>>>
>>> WITHOUT PREJUDICE
>>>
>>> Mr. David Amos
>>>
>>> Dear Mr. Amos:
>>>
>>> This will acknowledge receipt of a copy of your e-mail of December 29,
>>> 2006 to Corporal Warren McBeath of the RCMP.
>>>
>>> Because of the nature of the allegations made in your message, I have
>>> taken the measure of forwarding a copy to Assistant Commissioner Steve
>>> Graham of the RCMP “J” Division in Fredericton.
>>>
>>> Sincerely,
>>>
>>> Honourable Michael B. Murphy
>>> Minister of Health
>>>
>>> CM/cb
>>>
>>>
>>> Warren McBeath warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca wrote:
>>>
>>> Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:34:53 -0500
>>> From: "Warren McBeath" warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>> To: kilgoursite@ca.inter.net, MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca,
>>> nada.sarkis@gnb.ca, wally.stiles@gnb.ca, dwatch@web.net,
>>> motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>>> CC: ottawa@chuckstrahl.com, riding@chuckstrahl.com,John.
>>> Oda.B@parl.gc.ca,"Bev BUSSON" bev.busson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>> "Paul Dube" PAUL.DUBE@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>> Subject: Re: Remember me Kilgour? Landslide Annie McLellan has
>>> forgotten me but the crooks within the RCMP have not
>>>
>>> Dear Mr. Amos,
>>>
>>> Thank you for your follow up e-mail to me today. I was on days off
>>> over the holidays and returned to work this evening. Rest assured I
>>> was not ignoring or procrastinating to respond to your concerns.
>>>
>>> As your attachment sent today refers from Premier Graham, our position
>>> is clear on your dead calf issue: Our forensic labs do not process
>>> testing on animals in cases such as yours, they are referred to the
>>> Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown who can provide these
>>> services. If you do not choose to utilize their expertise in this
>>> instance, then that is your decision and nothing more can be done.
>>>
>>> As for your other concerns regarding the US Government, false
>>> imprisonment and Federal Court Dates in the US, etc... it is clear
>>> that Federal authorities are aware of your concerns both in Canada
>>> the US. These issues do not fall into the purvue of Detachment
>>> and policing in Petitcodiac, NB.
>>>
>>> It was indeed an interesting and informative conversation we had on
>>> December 23rd, and I wish you well in all of your future endeavors.
>>>
>>> Sincerely,
>>>
>>> Warren McBeath, Cpl.
>>> GRC Caledonia RCMP
>>> Traffic Services NCO
>>> Ph: (506) 387-2222
>>> Fax: (506) 387-4622
>>> E-mail warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.archive.org/
>>>
>>> http://www.archive.org/
>>>
>>>
>>> FEDERAL EXPRES February 7, 2006
>>> Senator Arlen Specter
>>> United States Senate
>>> Committee on the Judiciary
>>> 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building
>>> Washington, DC 20510
>>>
>>> Dear Mr. Specter:
>>>
>>> I have been asked to forward the enclosed tapes to you from a man
>>> named, David Amos, a Canadian citizen, in connection with the matters
>>> raised in the attached letter. Mr. Amos has represented to me that
>>> these are illegal FBI wire tap tapes. I believe Mr. Amos has been in
>>> contact
>>> with you about this previously.
>>>
>>> Very truly yours,
>>> Barry A. Bachrach
>>> Direct telephone: (508) 926-3403
>>> Direct facsimile: (508) 929-3003
>>> Email: bbachrach@bowditch.com
>>>
>>>
For general information please contact:
Email: CCRTIS-SCICTR@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Phone: 613-998-6362 between 7:30 AM and 5:30 PM Eastern Time
1-833-541-3089 between 7:30 AM and 5:30 PM Eastern Time
By Mail:
Director General
Canadian Criminal Real Time Identification Services RCMP, NPS Bldg.
1200 Vanier Parkway Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R2
By Courier:
Director General
Canadian Criminal Real Time Identification Services RCMP, NPS Bldg.,
Loading Dock #1 1200 Vanier Parkway Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R2
CCRTIS-SCICTR@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Eric.Hanson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
A copy of the new Tantramar organizational chart will be coming soon!
Chief Administrative Officer
Jennifer Borne
jborne@dorchester.com
Donna Beal, Clerk
d.beal@sackville.com
Becky Goodwin, Asst. Clerk
b.goodwin@sackville.com
Financial Services
Michael Beal, Treasurer
m.beal@sackville.com
Elizabeth Hartling, Asst. Treasurer
e.hartling@sackville.com
Corporate Projects
Kieran Miller, Sen. Manager
k.miller@sackville.com
Tourism & Business Development
Ron Kelly Spurles, Manager
r.kellyspurles@sackville.com
Recreation, Programs & Events
Matt Pryde, Manager
m.pryde@sackville.com
Tantramar Veterans Memorial Civic Centre,
Tel. (506) 364-4955, Fax (506) 364-4977
Todd Cole, Manager of Parks & Facilities
t.cole@sackville.com
Engineering and Public Works
101 Crescent St., Sackville Industrial Park
Tel. (506) 364-4960 [Call: (506) 364-4960] , Fax (506) 364-4978 [Call:
(506) 364-4978]
Jon Eppell, Town Engineer
j.eppell@sackville.com
Michelle Sherwood, Superintendent of Public Works
m.sherwood@sackville.com
Bylaw Enforcement
Corey Springer, By-Law Enforcement Officer
bylaw@sackville.com (506) 364-4930 [Call: (506) 364-4988]
Jaime Spicer, Animal Control Officer
Tel. (506)536-7671 [Call: (506) 364-9199]
Sackville Fire & Rescue
31B Main St.
Emergency: 911
Craig Bowser, Fire Chief
c.bowser@sackville.com, (506) 364-4988 [Call: (506) 364-4988]
Mike Green, Deputy Fire Chief
m.green@sackville.com, (506) 364-4987
RCMP
RCMP Sergeant
Sgt. Eric Hanson
31A Main Street
Emergency: 911
Daytime non-emergency: (506) 533-5151
After Hours, Weekends and holidays non-emergency:
1-888-506-7267 (English)
1-888-506-1472 (French)
Crime Stoppers: 1-800-222-8477 (tips)
Text: CRIMES(274637) KEYWORD tip252
Crimestoppers.ca
Community Program Officer
Position currently vacant
31A Main Street
Email: (community program inquiries only)
Plan 360
Tantramar District
131 H rue Main Street
Sackville, N-B, E4L 4B2 Canada
(506) 364-4701 [Call: (506) 364-4701]
plan360.ca
Phil Handrahan resigns as Sackville’s Chief Administrative Officer
After more than six years on the job, Phil Handrahan has submitted his resignation as the Town of Sackville’s Chief Administrative Officer (CAO).
Mayor John Higham informed councillors in an e-mail yesterday that Handrahan’s resignation will take effect at the end of February.
Handrahan became Sackville’s CAO in May 2013 after a 30-year career with the city of Charlottetown where he had been serving as director of fiscal and development services.
Neither the mayor nor Handrahan himself have returned phone calls so the reasons for the CAO’s resignation are not clear.
Councillor Bill Evans, who serves on the town’s personnel committee, said that he’s personally not surprised at Handrahan’s departure.
“When he came here,” Evans said, “his plan was to be here for a term,” he added. “My understanding is that his intention was to be here for five years.”
Evans said he’s grateful that Handrahan, whom he described as “an experienced administrator,” actually stayed a bit longer.
“I’ve been really pleased with his professionalism and the professionalism he’s brought to the town,” Evans said, adding that Handrahan clarified the roles of town staff and council.
Evans said the personnel committee knew about Handrahan’s decision to resign well before Monday night’s council meeting when the CAO uncharacteristically chastised a member of the public and Councillor Shawn Mesheau for raising questions about how the town evaluates the events it sponsors.
During the public question period, Shelley Chase, owner of an entertainment booking agency, asked what measurement system the town uses to calculate benefits to residents versus expenditures.
She pointed out, for example, that the town spent $9,035.50 to stage a Joel Plaskett concert that attracted 180 people. Chase said revenues amounted to only $5,750 producing what she called a “net financial loss of $3,385.”
Mayor Higham objected to her use of the word “loss.”
“It’s not a loss of money, it’s an investment by the community to deliver a service that doesn’t make a profit,” Higham said. “It’s not a loss as you described it,” the mayor added. “We’ll describe that there’s a difference between the revenue and the amount of cost attached to it.”
Higham said that similar questions arise over the town’s subsidies for the rink at the Civic Centre.
CAO Handrahan then said that it’s up to council to decide on town spending for events and besides, the town is not a profit-making organization.
“It’s not whether or not we’re making money,” Handrahan said. “We don’t charge for roads, we don’t charge 100% for the arena, we don’t charge for sidewalks, we’re not trying to make a dollar on events.”
After Handrahan accused Chase of not understanding what the town does, Councillor Shawn Mesheau said it’s important to evaluate municipal services.
“As a councillor, I would hope to get the information so that when budget time comes, that an evaluation could be done to help a determination be made in regards to a line item in the budget,” Mesheau said.
Handrahan replied that all information is supplied during budget deliberations. “And you as a former member of council know that,” he said referring to Mesheau’s previous years on council.
Handrahan added that council votes on all expenditures. “So, you’re the evaluator. You ask us what to do. We’re doing what you’ve asked us to do,” he said, adding, “You ask more questions than anybody. We answer them as best as we can to try and give you the information. To make that statement suggests that we’re just going off willy nilly spending money without a care,” the CAO said to Mesheau. “That’s unfair.”
Mesheau replied that he hadn’t said that.
“You said ‘needs to be evaluated,’ you should listen to what you just said,” Handrahan replied. “You’re implying that we’re just spending money and we don’t care.”
“Wow,” Mesheau said.
“Wow is right,” Handrahan answered as their testy exchange ended.
As per my calls I trust that the Mayors of Norton, Sackville and Port Elgin should not deny my sending this email EH Higgy?
Charity McDonald<charitymcd@gmail.com> | Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 9:58 PM |
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | |
Hi Dave, Thanks
for the call last eve, the conversation was quite interesting. Just
wanted to let you know, I did get your email, am reading through it…will
take some time, as there is a lot to read, and listen too, but will
read as I get opportunity to do so. Take care and have a great eve, will chat again, Charity |
David Amos<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 1:04 AM |
To: walcorn54@gmail.com, cclark76@hotmail.ca, Randal_McKnight@yahoo.ca, johnurquart73@gmail.com, charitymcd@gmail.com, cbgillis@hotmail.com, stephenpmuir@outlook.com, jeffgaunce@villageofnorton.com, 1967asnyder@gmail.com, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, j.burke@sackville.com, info@villageofportelgin.com, lise.babineau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, "Mitton, Megan (LEG)" <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "Marco.Mendicino" <Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, vnorton <vnorton@nbnet.nb.ca>, p.handrahan@sackville.com, j.higham@sackville.com, t.cole@sackville.com, alfwal@nbnet.nb.ca, "bruce.wark" <bruce.wark@bellaliant.net>, simon.serge@kanesatake.ca, "harjit.sajjan" <harjit.sajjan@parl.gc.ca>, "carolyn.bennett" <carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca>, jean-francois.leblanc@rcmp-grc.gc.ca | |
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Ross.Wetmore" <Ross.Wetmore@gnb.ca>, "Bill.Oliver" <Bill.Oliver@gnb.ca>, "Gary.Crossman" <Gary.Crossman@gnb.ca>, "John.Williamson" <John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca>, "rob.moore" <rob.moore@parl.gc.ca> | |
Wednesday, 2 November 2022 Local elections get enough candidates for functioning councils ---------- Original message ---------- From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca> Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2022 17:56:36 +0000 Subject: RE: Mr Handrahan I just called again tell your Mayor and his friends in the RCMP to start lining up lawyers To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail. Hello, Thank you for taking the time to write. Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed at the earliest opportunity. If your inquiry more appropriately falls within the mandate of a Ministry or other area of government, staff will refer your email for review and consideration. Merci d'avoir pris le temps de nous écrire. En raison du volume des messages reçus, cette réponse automatique vous informe que votre courriel a été reçu et sera examiné dans les meilleurs délais. Si votre demande relève plutôt du mandat d'un ministère ou d'un autre secteur du gouvernement, le personnel vous renverra votre courriel pour examen et considération. If this is a Media Request, please contact the Premier’s office at (506) 453-2144 or by email media-medias@gnb.ca<mailto:med S’il s’agit d’une demande des médias, veuillez communiquer avec le Cabinet du premier ministre au 506-453-2144. Office of the Premier/Cabinet du premier ministre P.O Box/C. P. 6000 Fredericton New-Brunswick/Nouveau- Tel./Tel. : (506) 453-2144 Email/Courriel: premier@gnb.ca/premier. ---------- Original message ---------- From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail. Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2022 14:54:45 -0300 Subject: Re: Mr Handrahan I just called again tell your Mayor and his friends in the RCMP to start lining up lawyers To: "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, j.burke@sackville.com, info@villageofportelgin.com, lise.babineau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, "Mitton, Megan (LEG)" <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "Marco.Mendicino" <Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, vnorton@nbnet.nb.ca Cc: p.handrahan@sackville.com, j.higham@sackville.com, t.cole@sackville.com, alfwal@nbnet.nb.ca, motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "bruce.wark" <bruce.wark@bellaliant.net>, simon.serge@kanesatake.ca, "harjit.sajjan" <harjit.sajjan@parl.gc.ca>, "carolyn.bennett" <carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca>, jean-francois.leblanc@rcmp- On 7/8/19, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote |
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 2019 14:54:57 -0400
Subject: Fwd: Mr Handrahan I just called again tell your Mayor and his
friends in the RCMP to start lining up lawyers
To: b.phinney@sackville.com, m.tower@sackville.com,
j.oneil@sackville.com, b.evans@sackville.com, a.butcher@sackville.com,
a.black@sackville.com, r.aiken@sackville.com
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
<premier@gnb.ca>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, Newsroom
<Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
"Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "David.Akin"
<David.Akin@globalnews.ca>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 2019 14:11:16 -0400
Subject: Mr Handrahan I just called again tell your Mayor and his
friends in the RCMP to start lining up lawyers
To: p.handrahan@sackville.com, j.higham@sackville.com,
t.cole@sackville.com, alfwal@nbnet.nb.ca
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
<bruce.wark@bellaliant.net>, simon.serge@kanesatake.ca,
"harjit.sajjan" <harjit.sajjan@parl.gc.ca>, "carolyn.bennett"
<carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca>, jean-francois.leblanc@rcmp-
https://warktimes.com/2019/07/
https://warktimes.com/2017/08/
Paul Gagne, RCMP Sergeant
31A Main Street
Emergency: 911
Local: 533-5151 (0800-1600 hours)
After Hours: 1-800-665-6663 [Call: 1-800-665-6663]
Crime Stoppers: 1-800-222-8477(tips)
Text: CRIMES(274637) KEYWORD tip252
Crimestoppers.ca
Jean-Francois LeBlanc, RCMP Community Program Officer
31A Main Street
Office Directly: 506-364-5107
Cell: 506-874-0010
Alf Walker 1st Vice President
RCL Branch 26
506 364 7766 cell
506 364 1093 fax
506 536 0304 home
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 7 Jul 2019 22:34:13 -0400
Subject: Megan Mitton must know who Sally Cunliffe is by now
To: abordage@rogers.com, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre
<andre@jafaust.com>, lenorezannmla <lenorezannmla@bellaliant.com>,
<Dale.Morgan@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Roger.Brown"
<Roger.Brown@fredericton.ca>, "martin.gaudet"
<martin.gaudet@fredericton.ca>
<mike.obrien@fredericton.ca>, "dominic.leblanc.c1"
<dominic.leblanc.c1@parl.gc.ca
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
(LEG)" <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "Larry.Tremblay"
<Larry.Tremblay@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
<Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "warren.mcbeath"
<warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
<hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>
https://davidraymondamos3.
Saturday, 29 June 2019
Controversial political party greeted by vocal protesters in Saint John
https://twitter.com/
David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks everybody knows that the wacko Sally Cunliffe has to learn
some new tricks before the RCMP pull out a Section 10 document on her
or prosecute her under Section 300 N'esy Pas?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
#cdnpoli #nbpoli
indiemediaeastcoastcanada.
METHINKS FOLKS SHOULD SCROLL DOWN IF THEY WISH TO READ THE ENTIRE
EMAIL N'ESY PAS?
---------- Orginal message ----------
From: "Mitton, Megan (LEG)" <Megan.Mitton@gnb.ca>
Date: Sun, 30 Jun 2019 17:44:52 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Canadian Truths I would lay odds that
Megan Mitton knows Sally Cunliffe I know for a fact that Andre Faust
certainly does
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Thank you for your email. MLA Megan Mitton is out of the office and
will return the week of July 8th. We appreciate your patience, and
will read your email as soon as possible. If you require assistance
promptly, please email Alice Cotton, Constituency Coordinator
(alice.cotton@gnb.ca). For more urgent matters, you can also call the
office at (506) 378-1565. Merci pour votre courriel. La députée Megan
Mitton sera absente du bureau et reviendra la semaine du 8 juillet.
Nous apprécions votre patience, et nous lirons votre courriel dès que
possible. Si vous avez besoin d'aide plus rapidement, veuillez envoyer
un courriel à Alice Cotton, coordonnatrice de circonscription
(alice.cotton@gnb.ca). Pour des questions plus urgentes, vous pouvez
également appeler le bureau au (506) 378-1565.
Eastcoast Blogger
petitcodiac... check into werner bock .. a farmer there
David Amos
How stupid are you trolls?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
David Amos
"did you ever meet charlie leblanc? he's a blogger downeast too.. not
a bright guy but apparently famous"
DUHHH????
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
David Amos Yo Sally why did ya delete the link to your hero Chucky
Leblanc yapping about me in Federal Court?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Kata List Productions
You're confused... you keep repeating comments about deleted
comments.. why? No one is listening to your mad crazy shit Dave.
David Amos
@Kata List Productions I see you put the link to Chucky's bragging
back after you reminded the folks about you versus Chucky Leblanc and
his butt buddy Andre Faust of Occupy NB N'esy Pas Sally Baby?
Eastcoast Blogger
Occupy is full of commi.. but you are a class of something else.... a
troll with brain damage most likely.
David Amos
@Eastcoast Blogger Methinks mindless Trolls such as yourself must
resort to ad hominem insults when they run out of hot air and BS N'esy
Pas?
Kata List Productions
Werner Bock - farmer / rancher immigrant from Germany.. look into it Dave...
David Amos
@Kata List Productions Methinks everybody and his dog and particularly
your RCMP buddies in Petiticodiac know that I know your pal Werner
Bock very well N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Methinks the RCMP should go figure why I saved this video N'esy Pas Sally Baby?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Town of Sackville - Facebook Censors
11 views
Eastcoast Blogger
Published on Jun 13, 2019
Censored and taking notes, described by the important people as: " low
class " - "unimportant " - a "troublemaker "..
2 Comments
David Amos
Yo Sally Baby ask yourself why I saved this nonsense of yours?
Reply
Eastcoast Blogger
Because you're an obsessed lil dude?
David Amos
"Comments are disabled for this video."
TOO LATE and TOO TOO FUNNY
CNP - Canadian Nationalist Party - Trav Patron
https://youtu.be/8RQvA-Ox20s
Kata List Productions
Published on May 28, 2019
#travpatron #cnp #nationalist #canadiannationalistparty
http://nationalist.ca
The Canadian Nationalist Party (CNP) is a political party operating in
the federal jurisdiction of Canada. Our constituency advocates for a
constitutional monarchy within Canada, governed domestically rather
than through the British Crown. We advocate for an ethnocentric Canada
because we believe any political stance is rooted in identitarianism.
That is, the unifying factor of a nation is understood to be a common
tradition, lineage, and language. This is a movement based on the
principles of the Christian traditions inherent in the history of
Canada.
3 Comments
Kata List Productions (edited)
CBC talked to Trav Patron in 2018 .. leader of CNP - Canadian Nationalist Party
Reply
David Amos
Say Hey to Trav and your buddies in the RCMP for me will ya?
David Amos
Eastcoast Blogger David Raymond Amos -- they won't answer your emails
about me .. gosh .. honey.. why do you think that could be old man?
hahaha! Reply David Amos @Eastcoast Blogger Now that is truly funny
because I am about to send them another email about YOU. FYI I just
talked to your buddy Travis Patron (306 700 2193) about the RCMP
Methinks you maybe the evil hate monger helping him on YouTube N'esy
Pas?
http://
Sunday, 7 July 2019
CNP - Canadian Nationalist Party - Trav Patron
https://youtu.be/8RQvA-Ox20s
#travpatron #cnp #nationalist #canadiannationalistparty
http://nationalist.ca The Canadian Nationalist Party (CNP) is a
political party operating in the federal jurisdiction of Canada. Our
constituency advocates for a constitutional monarchy within Canada,
governed domestically rather than through the British Crown. We
advocate for an ethnocentric Canada because we believe any political
stance is rooted in identitarianism. That is, the unifying factor of a
nation is understood to be a common tradition, lineage, and language.
This is a movement based on the principles of the Christian traditions
inherent in the history of Canada.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
RCMP launch hate crime probe of leader of nationalist group vying for
party status in federal election
Elections Canada gives Canadian Nationalist Party until mid-July to
meet requirements
Dave Seglins, Andreas Wesley, Carly Thomas · CBC News · Posted: Jun
28, 2019 4:00 AM ET
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 10:45:57 -0400
Subject: Fwd: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al
think of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy
Chucky joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: j.higham@sackville.com
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 09:59:24 -0400
Subject: Fwd: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al
think of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy
Chucky joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: Ernie.Steeves@gnb.ca, Sherry.Wilson@gnb.ca,
Keirstead.Brian@gnb.ca, "Ross.Wetmore" <Ross.Wetmore@gnb.ca>,
Gary.Crossman@gnb.ca, Glen.Savoie@gnb.ca, Trevor.Holder@gnb.ca,
Dorothy.Shephard@gnb.ca, Ed.Doherty@gnb.ca, Bill.Oliver@gnb.ca,
John.Ames@gnb.ca, "michael.bray" <michael.bray@
Jody.Carr@gnb.ca, Pam.Lynch@gnb.ca, Jeff.Carr@gnb.ca,
Carl.Urquhart@gnb.ca, Stewart.Fairgrieve@gnb.ca, Andrew.Harvey@gnb.ca,
Chuck.Chiasson@gnb.ca, Madeleine.Dube@gnb.ca, Francine.Landry@gnb.ca
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
<dan.bussieres@gnb.ca>, "brian.gallant" <brian.gallant@gnb.ca>,
"Dominic.Cardy" <Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca>, oldmaison
<oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>, tj <tj@burkelaw.ca>,
"chris.collins" <chris.collins@gnb.ca>, "David.Coon"
<David.Coon@gnb.ca>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Gallant, Premier Brian (PO/CPM)" <Brian.Gallant@gnb.ca>
Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2016 17:05:07 +0000
Subject: RE: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al
think of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy
Chucky joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Thank you for writing to the Premier of New Brunswick.
Please be assured that your email has been received, will be reviewed,
and a response will be forthcoming.
Once again, thank you for taking the time to write.
Merci d'avoir communiqué avec le premier ministre du Nouveau-Brunswick.
Soyez assuré que votre courriel a bien été reçu, qu'il sera examiné
et qu'une réponse vous sera acheminée.
Merci encore d'avoir pris de temps de nous écrire.
Sincerely, / Sincèrement,
Mallory Fowler
Correspondence Manager / Gestionnaire de la correspondance
Office of the Premier / Cabinet du premier ministre
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2016 07:40:50 -0400
Subject: Fwd: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al
think of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy
Chucky joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: Ernie.Steeves@gnb.ca, Sherry.Wilson@gnb.ca,
Keirstead.Brian@gnb.ca, "Ross.Wetmore" <Ross.Wetmore@gnb.ca>,
Gary.Crossman@gnb.ca, Glen.Savoie@gnb.ca, Trevor.Holder@gnb.ca,
Dorothy.Shephard@gnb.ca, Ed.Doherty@gnb.ca, Bill.Oliver@gnb.ca,
John.Ames@gnb.ca, "michael.bray" <michael.bray@
Jody.Carr@gnb.ca, Pam.Lynch@gnb.ca, Jeff.Carr@gnb.ca,
Carl.Urquhart@gnb.ca, Stewart.Fairgrieve@gnb.ca, Andrew.Harvey@gnb.ca,
Chuck.Chiasson@gnb.ca, Madeleine.Dube@gnb.ca, Francine.Landry@gnb.ca
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
<premier@leg.gov.mb.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>, premier
<premier@ontario.ca>, premier <premier@gov.bc.ca>, premier
<premier@gov.pe.ca>, premier <premier@gov.sk.ca>, newsroom
<newsroom@globeandmail.ca>, news-tips <news-tips@nytimes.com>, pm
<pm@pm.gc.ca>, news <news@hilltimes.com>, premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>,
"brian.hodgson" <brian.hodgson@assembly.ab.ca>
<Ezra@therebel.media>, "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Gallant, Premier Brian (PO/CPM)" <Brian.Gallant@gnb.ca>
Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2016 11:00:54 +0000
Subject: RE: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al
think of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy
Chucky joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Thank you for writing to the Premier of New Brunswick.
Please be assured that your email has been received, will be reviewed,
and a response will be forthcoming.
Once again, thank you for taking the time to write.
Merci d'avoir communiqué avec le premier ministre du Nouveau-Brunswick.
Soyez assuré que votre courriel a bien été reçu, qu'il sera examiné
et qu'une réponse vous sera acheminée.
Merci encore d'avoir pris de temps de nous écrire.
Sincerely, / Sincèrement,
Mallory Fowler
Correspondence Manager / Gestionnaire de la correspondance
Office of the Premier / Cabinet du premier ministre
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2016 07:00:35 -0400
Subject: So what does Premier Gallant and Minister Doucet et al think
of my lawsuit? How about David Coon and his blogging buddy Chucky
joking about being illegally barred from parliamentary property
To: Rick.Doucet@gnb.ca, premier <premier@gnb.ca>, briangallant10
<briangallant10@gmail.com>, "David.Coon" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>,
"Davidc.Coon" <Davidc.Coon@gmail.com>, oldmaison
<oldmaison@yahoo.com>, "Bill.Fraser" <Bill.Fraser@gnb.ca>,
"Brian.kenny" <Brian.kenny@gnb.ca>, "serge.rousselle"
<serge.rousselle@gnb.ca>, "denis.landry2" <denis.landry2@gnb.ca>,
"Stephen.Horsman" <Stephen.Horsman@gnb.ca>, "victor.boudreau"
<victor.boudreau@gnb.ca>, nmoore <nmoore@bellmedia.ca>, "steve.murphy"
<steve.murphy@ctv.ca>, "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>,
"macpherson.don" <macpherson.don@dailygleaner.
<dan.bussieres@gnb.ca>, "leanne.murray"
<leanne.murray@mcinnescooper.
<shutchison@stewartmckelvey.
<bdysart@stewartmckelvey.com>, bdysart <bdysart@smss.com>,
"david.eidt" <david.eidt@gnb.ca>, "CRAIG.DALTON" <CRAIG.DALTON@gnb.ca>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
<brian.t.macdonald@gnb.ca>, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>,
"hugh.flemming" <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>, "jake.stewart"
<jake.stewart@gnb.ca>, "bruce.northrup" <bruce.northrup@gnb.ca>,
"bruce.fitch" <bruce.fitch@gnb.ca>
New Brunswick Green Party Leader David Coon views on Brian Gallant
Cabinet Shuffle!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Doucet, Rick (LEG)" <Rick.Doucet@gnb.ca>
Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2014 01:07:58 +0000
Subject: RE: Final Docs
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Will get right on this.
Always look forward to your brilliant thoughts.
R
Hon.Rick Doucet
Legislative member for Charlotte-the isles
28 Mt.Pleasant Rd.
St.George, N.B. E5C 3K4
Phone / Téléphone : 506-755-4200
Fax / Télécopieur : 506-755-4207
E-mail / Courriel : rick.doucet@gnb.ca
This message is intended for the person to whom it is addressed and is
to be treated as confidential or private communications. It must not
be forwarded unless permission has been received from the originator.
If you have received this message inadvertently, please notify the
sender and delete the message. Then delete your response. Thank you
for your cooperation.
------------------------------
Ce message est destiné à la personne désignée dans la présente et il
doit demeurer confidentiel. Il ne doit pas être réacheminé sans la
permission de l’expéditeur. Si ce message vous a été envoyé par
erreur, veuillez aviser l’expéditeur et effacer le message. Effacez
ensuite votre réponse. Merci de votre collaboration.
---------- Original message ----------
From: "Gallant, Premier Brian (PO/CPM)" <Brian.Gallant@gnb.ca>
Date: Tue, 10 May 2016 23:42:40 +0000
Subject: RE: You are welcome Premeir Gallant Say Hoka Hey to the evil
blogger Chucky Leblanc and all his Green Meanie Fake Left and Native
buddies for me will ya?
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Thank you for writing to the Premier of New Brunswick.
Please be assured that your email has been received, will be reviewed,
and a response will be forthcoming.
Once again, thank you for taking the time to write.
Merci d'avoir communiqué avec le premier ministre du Nouveau-Brunswick.
Soyez assuré que votre courriel a bien été reçu, qu'il sera examiné
et qu'une réponse vous sera acheminée.
Merci encore d'avoir pris de temps de nous écrire.
Sincerely, / Sincèrement,
Mallory Fowler
Correspondence Manager / Gestionnaire de la correspondance
Office of the Premier / Cabinet du premier ministre
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: Póstur FOR <postur@for.is>
>> Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2016 22:05:47 +0000
>> Subject: Re: Hey Premier Gallant please inform the questionable
>> parliamentarian Birigtta Jonsdottir that although NB is a small "Have
>> Not" province at least we have twice the population of Iceland and
>> that not all of us are as dumb as she and her Prime Minister pretends
>> to be..
>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>
>> Erindi þitt hefur verið móttekið / Your request has been received
>>
>> Kveðja / Best regards
>> Forsætisráðuneytið / Prime Minister's Office
>>
>>
>> This is the docket
>>
>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj.
>>
>> These are digital recordings of the last two hearings
>>
>> Dec 14th https://archive.org/details/
>>
>> Jan 11th https://archive.org/details/
>>
>> This me running for a seat in Parliament again while CBC denies it again
>>
>> Fundy Royal, New Brunswick Debate – Federal Elections 2015 - The Local
>> Campaign, Rogers TV
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?
>>
>> http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/
>>
>> Veritas Vincit
>> David Raymond Amos
>> 902 800 0369
>>
>>
http://davidraymondamos3.
83. The Plaintiff states that now that Canada is involved in more war
in Iraq again it did not serve Canadian interests and reputation to
allow Barry Winters to publish the following words three times over
five years after he began his bragging:
January 13, 2015
This Is Just AS Relevant Now As When I wrote It During The Debate
December 8, 2014
Why Canada Stood Tall!
Friday, October 3, 2014
Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
Stupid Justin Trudeau
Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien
actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign
in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary to
the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were
involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were
significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the dearth
of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for
operations after the initial occupation of Iraq. At the “last minute”
Prime Minister Chretien and the Liberal government changed its mind.
The Canadian government told our amerkan cousins that we would not
deploy combat troops for the Iraq campaign, but would deploy a
Canadian Battle Group to Afghanistan, enabling our amerkan cousins to
redeploy troops from there to Iraq. The PMO’s thinking that it was
less costly to deploy Canadian Forces to Afghanistan than Iraq. But
alas no one seems to remind the Liberals of Prime Minister Chretien’s
then grossly incorrect assumption. Notwithstanding Jean Chretien’s
incompetence and stupidity, the Canadian Army was heroic,
professional, punched well above it’s weight, and the PPCLI Battle
Group, is credited with “saving Afghanistan” during the Panjway
campaign of 2006.
What Justin Trudeau and the Liberals don’t tell you now, is that then
Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien committed, and deployed the
Canadian army to Canada’s longest “war” without the advice, consent,
support, or vote of the Canadian Parliament.
What David Amos and the rest of the ignorant, uneducated, and babbling
chattering classes are too addled to understand is the deployment of
less than 75 special operations troops, and what is known by planners
as a “six pac cell” of fighter aircraft is NOT the same as a
deployment of a Battle Group, nor a “war” make.
The Canadian Government or The Crown unlike our amerkan cousins have
the “constitutional authority” to commit the Canadian nation to war.
That has been recently clearly articulated to the Canadian public by
constitutional scholar Phillippe Legasse. What Parliament can do is
remove “confidence” in The Crown’s Government in a “vote of
non-confidence.” That could not happen to the Chretien Government
regarding deployment to Afghanistan, and it won’t happen in this
instance with the conservative majority in The Commons regarding a
limited Canadian deployment to the Middle East.
President George Bush was quite correct after 911 and the terror
attacks in New York; that the Taliban “occupied” and “failed state”
Afghanistan was the source of logistical support, command and control,
and training for the Al Quaeda war of terror against the world. The
initial defeat, and removal from control of Afghanistan was vital and
essential for the security and tranquility of the developed world. An
ISIS “caliphate,” in the Middle East, no matter how small, is a clear
and present danger to the entire world. This “occupied state,”
or“failed state” will prosecute an unending Islamic inspired war of
terror against not only the “western world,” but Arab states
“moderate” or not, as well. The security, safety, and tranquility of
Canada and Canadians are just at risk now with the emergence of an
ISIS“caliphate” no matter how large or small, as it was with the
Taliban and Al Quaeda “marriage” in Afghanistan.
One of the everlasting “legacies” of the “Trudeau the Elder’s dynasty
was Canada and successive Liberal governments cowering behind the
amerkan’s nuclear and conventional military shield, at the same time
denigrating, insulting them, opposing them, and at the same time
self-aggrandizing ourselves as “peace keepers,” and progenitors of
“world peace.” Canada failed. The United States of Amerka, NATO, the
G7 and or G20 will no longer permit that sort of sanctimonious
behavior from Canada or its government any longer. And Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, Foreign Minister John Baird , and Cabinet are fully
cognizant of that reality. Even if some editorial boards, and pundits
are not.
Justin, Trudeau “the younger” is reprising the time “honoured” liberal
mantra, and tradition of expecting the amerkans or the rest of the
world to do “the heavy lifting.” Justin Trudeau and his “butt buddy”
David Amos are telling Canadians that we can guarantee our security
and safety by expecting other nations to fight for us. That Canada can
and should attempt to guarantee Canadians safety by providing
“humanitarian aid” somewhere, and call a sitting US president a “war
criminal.” This morning Australia announced they too, were sending
tactical aircraft to eliminate the menace of an ISIS “caliphate.”
In one sense Prime Minister Harper is every bit the scoundrel Trudeau
“the elder” and Jean ‘the crook” Chretien was. Just As Trudeau, and
successive Liberal governments delighted in diminishing,
marginalizing, under funding Canadian Forces, and sending Canadian
military men and women to die with inadequate kit and modern
equipment; so too is Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Canada’s F-18s are
antiquated, poorly equipped, and ought to have been replaced five
years ago. But alas, there won’t be single RCAF fighter jock that
won’t go, or won’t want to go, to make Canada safe or safer.
My Grandfather served this country. My father served this country. My
Uncle served this country. And I have served this country. Justin
Trudeau has not served Canada in any way. Thomas Mulcair has not
served this country in any way. Liberals and so called social
democrats haven’t served this country in any way. David Amos, and
other drooling fools have not served this great nation in any way. Yet
these fools are more than prepared to ensure their, our safety to
other nations, and then criticize them for doing so.
Canada must again, now, “do our bit” to guarantee our own security,
and tranquility, but also that of the world. Canada has never before
shirked its responsibility to its citizens and that of the world.
Prime Minister Harper will not permit this country to do so now
From: dnd_mdn@forces.gc.ca
Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 14:17:17 -0400
Subject: RE: Re Greg Weston, The CBC , Wikileaks, USSOCOM, Canada and
the War in Iraq (I just called SOCOM and let them know I was still
alive
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
This is to confirm that the Minister of National Defence has received
your email and it will be reviewed in due course. Please do not reply
to this message: it is an automatic acknowledgement.
>>>>
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 13:55:30 -0300
Subject: Re Greg Weston, The CBC , Wikileaks, USSOCOM, Canada and the
War in Iraq (I just called SOCOM and let them know I was still alive
To: DECPR@forces.gc.ca, Public.Affairs@socom.mil,
Raymonde.Cleroux@mpcc-cppm.gc.
william.elliott@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
dnd_mdn@forces.gc.ca, media@drdc-rddc.gc.ca, information@forces.gc.ca,
milner@unb.ca, charters@unb.ca, lwindsor@unb.ca,
sarah.weir@mpcc-cppm.gc.ca, birgir <birgir@althingi.is>, smari
<smari@immi.is>, greg.weston@cbc.ca, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>,
susan@blueskystrategygroup.com
eugene@blueskystrategygroup.
Cc: "Edith. Cody-Rice" <Edith.Cody-Rice@cbc.ca>, "terry.seguin"
<terry.seguin@cbc.ca>, acampbell <acampbell@ctv.ca>, whistleblower
<whistleblower@ctv.ca>
I talked to Don Newman earlier this week before the beancounters David
Dodge and Don Drummond now of Queen's gave their spin about Canada's
Health Care system yesterday and Sheila Fraser yapped on and on on
CAPAC during her last days in office as if she were oh so ethical.. To
be fair to him I just called Greg Weston (613-288-6938) I suggested
that he should at least Google SOUCOM and David Amos It would be wise
if he check ALL of CBC's sources before he publishes something else
about the DND EH Don Newman? Lets just say that the fact that your
old CBC buddy, Tony Burman is now in charge of Al Jazeera English
never impressed me. The fact that he set up a Canadian office is
interesting though
http://www.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/
Anyone can call me back and stress test my integrity after they read
this simple pdf file. BTW what you Blue Sky dudes pubished about
Potash Corp and BHP is truly funny. Perhaps Stevey Boy Harper or Brad
Wall will fill ya in if you are to shy to call mean old me.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/
The Governor General, the PMO and the PCO offices know that I am not a
shy political animal
Veritas Vincit
David Raymond Amos
902 800 0369
Enjoy Mr Weston
http://www.cbc.ca/m/touch/
"But Lang, defence minister McCallum's chief of staff, says military
brass were not entirely forthcoming on the issue. For instance, he
says, even McCallum initially didn't know those soldiers were helping
to plan the invasion of Iraq up to the highest levels of command,
including a Canadian general.
That general is Walt Natynczyk, now Canada's chief of defence staff,
who eight months after the invasion became deputy commander of 35,000
U.S. soldiers and other allied forces in Iraq. Lang says Natynczyk was
also part of the team of mainly senior U.S. military brass that helped
prepare for the invasion from a mobile command in Kuwait."
http://baconfat53.blogspot.
"I remember years ago when the debate was on in Canada, about there
being weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Our American 'friends"
demanded that Canada join into "the Coalition of the Willing. American
"veterans" and sportscasters loudly denounced Canada for NOT buying
into the US policy.
At the time I was serving as a planner at NDHQ and with 24 other of my
colleagues we went to Tampa SOUCOM HQ to be involved in the planning
in the planning stages of the op....and to report to NDHQ, that would
report to the PMO upon the merits of the proposed operation. There was
never at anytime an existing target list of verified sites where there
were deployed WMD.
Coalition assets were more than sufficient for the initial strike and
invasion phase but even at that point in the planning, we were
concerned about the number of "boots on the ground" for the occupation
(and end game) stage of an operation in Iraq. We were also concerned
about the American plans for occupation plans of Iraq because they at
that stage included no contingency for a handing over of civil
authority to a vetted Iraqi government and bureaucracy.
There was no detailed plan for Iraq being "liberated" and returned to
its people...nor a thought to an eventual exit plan. This was contrary
to the lessons of Vietnam but also to current military thought, that
folks like Colin Powell and "Stuffy" Leighton and others elucidated
upon. "What's the mission" how long is the mission, what conditions
are to met before US troop can redeploy? Prime Minister Jean Chretien
and the PMO were even at the very preliminary planning stages wary of
Canadian involvement in an Iraq operation....History would prove them
correct. The political pressure being applied on the PMO from the
George W Bush administration was onerous
American military assets were extremely overstretched, and Canadian
military assets even more so It was proposed by the PMO that Canadian
naval platforms would deploy to assist in naval quarantine operations
in the Gulf and that Canadian army assets would deploy in Afghanistan
thus permitting US army assets to redeploy for an Iraqi
operation....The PMO thought that "compromise would save Canadian
lives and liberal political capital.. and the priority of which
....not necessarily in that order. "
You can bet that I called these sneaky Yankees again today EH John
Adams? of the CSE within the DND?
http://www.socom.mil/
Evans says he was not pleased but also not surprised at the answer from Allain, which he characterizes thus: “The guy who created the flawed process has assured us that it wasn’t flawed.”
Evans says he can’t prove it, but he suspects Minister Allain of punishing Sackville for being outspoken about the local government reform process.
When the plan for forced amalgamations first came to light, Evans recalls, “some people advised us that pushing back would get the Minister mad at us, and we might suffer consequences. And I thought, oh my god, this is like a mafia protection racket. We cannot call out wrongdoing, lest we be punished.”
Evans says he feels the process was flawed in part due to the membership of the HR committee that made the final recommendation to Allain. “One of them was the facilitator [Chad Peters] appointed by the Minister, one was a person [Chris Milner] appointed by the facilitator, and one represented Dorchester [Robert Corkerton],” says Evans. “And they pick the Dorchester CAO.”
Evans also believes that based on Borne’s work experience managing the village of Dorchester and working for the town of Amherst, she would not have made the shortlist in an external hiring process such as the one used to hire Jamie Burke in 2020. “With that CV, she would not have got an interview,” says Evans.
“This is not anything personal against [Borne],” says Evans. “But a group of people picked somebody who, in my opinion, is the inferior candidate.”
Evans was one of seven town councillors who voted in favour of hiring Jamie Burke in 2020. “We have someone who has done the job well, and has the support of the existing council, representing whatever it is, two thirds of the population of the new entity,” says Evans. “And the minister imposed his will and picked someone else. And it’s my opinion that he did it out of spite.”
CHMA has reached out to Jennifer Borne for an interview, but she was not available at this time. We hope to bring you that interview in the near future.
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Conversation
Nature conservancy wants to help moose cross the Isthmus for Christmas
There are about 29,000 moose in New Brunswick, but only about 1,000 in mainland Nova Scotia
The goal of the campaign, says spokesperson Andrew Holland, is to educate about the importance of the Chignecto Isthmus Focal Area, also known as the moose sex corridor.
This marks the 4th annual Help the Moose Cross the Isthmus for Christmas Campaign.
"This is trying to get moose to move over into Nova Scotia to boost the gene pool. They need it," Holland told CBC Halifax's Information Morning.
The corridor is intended for moose, bobcat, bear, endangered Canada lynx. There are about 29,000 moose in New Brunswick, but only about 1,000 in mainland Nova Scotia, which are a different sub-species than the plentiful Cape Breton moose, Holland says.
"They use this crucial area. That's how they get around."
'We're trying to act now'
Over the last four years, the Nature Conservancy has been piecing together about 1090 hectares, protected on the Nova Scotia and New Brunswick side of the Chignecto Isthmus area.
This Christmas campaign involves 77 hectares on the Nova Scotia side, two land purchases north of Amherst. On the New Brunswick side, they have 104 hectares of land near Shediac and another project close to Route 16 in New Brunswick that's 32 hectares. They're trying to raise $28,000 to finalize these purchases.
Holland jokes the project can help interprovincial relations.
"The Nature Conservancy of Canada has chosen this area because of fragmentation," he said. "Wetlands being taken out of commission, so to speak, and also forested areas. We're trying to act now and save the best of what's left."
Even if this year's fundraising campaign is successful, they still have a way's to go to reach their goal: a single and continuous tract of land for the corridor.
"These are key pieces of the puzzle and that's what this is all about — working with private land owners who wants to sell or donate their lands to us so we can make a wilderness corridor and it's showing progress."
"For the population to have some potential to bounce back, we really need to improve the gene pool on the Nova Scotia side," he said.
The Nature Conservancy of Canada has been working in Nova Scotia since 1971.
Its April 10th, 2023
Methinks folks should wonder why I am laughing at the nonsense in my old stomping grounds today N'esy Pas?
This platform for viewers was built by the village of Dorchester in 2021. All that’s missing: one giant sandpiper. Image: contributed
Every year, tens of thousands of tiny sandpipers arrive in the Bay of Fundy mudflats at Johnsons Mills after having left their breeding grounds in the Arctic. When they arrive they weigh about as much as a strawberry, and proceed to feast in the Fundy mudflats until they’ve doubled their weight and can make the rest of their journey down to South America.
But there’s one sandpiper that doesn’t make the trip. Or at least there was. For about 20 years, a wooden statue of Shep the Sandpiper—the world’s biggest, they say—stood in Dorchester Village square, an homage to the natural wonder the birds create, and an attraction to passersby. But in recent years Shep has been missing, having fallen victim to wood rot and been taken down for repair.
A group of residents from the village are determined to bring Shep back to Dorchester, and they presented to Tantramar Council on Tuesday to make their case.
“As the undisputed world’s largest Sandpiper, Shep has always received a lot of attention,” Kara Becker told council, noting that Shep is still featured on the Tourism New Brunswick website and tripadvisor.com. “Unfortunately, this has turned to disappointment when visitors go to see her,” said Becker, quoting from a Trip Advisor review that rated the attraction just one out of five. “Shep the Sandpiper is missing,” reads the review. “We got there on May 19, 2022, and Shep was not there, only the stand and rocks.”
While the village of Dorchester managed to get a new platform for Step built in 2021, it remains empty, as the project to repair the wooden bird has been beleaguered with setbacks.
The original Shep in his spot in Dorchester village square about 4 years ago. Photo: Susan McDonald
The original artist who carved Shep more than 20 years ago had taken on the repair work for the statue by 2021, but the conditions of the wood were worse than originally suspected. Then in October 2021, someone broke into Monty MacMillan’s workshop in Maugerville and cleaned out all his tools. It was enough to get the 80-year-old MacMillan to throw in the towel.
More than six months later (coincidentally a few days before the disappointed tourist from the Trip Advisor review) Dorchester village councillors got the bad news that MacMillan couldn’t complete the work. According to village council minutes, new options would have to be explored that would take the project into 2023, and into a newly amalgamated municipality.
One of those options appears to have been Robin Hanson, a painter, sculptor, and owner of the Hanson Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden outside Oromocto. Hanson made a local social media splash recently when he posted pictures of a completed Shep in fiberglass and epoxy finish, designed to survive a few decades in the village square. That post has since been taken down, but CHMA called up Hanson to find out about his experience building a new Shep, after being approached by former Dorchester mayor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell.
Hansen says it was Monty MacMillan who referred Wiggins-Colwell to him. “She was on the mission to see if she could get Shep replaced with a new Shep,” recalls Hanson. “[MacMillan] had just decided that he’s not going to do [carving] anymore, and so he recommended that Debbie talk to me, and so she did. She came out, and she brought the legs out, and the beak.”
Wiggins-Colwell told CHMA she was originally part of a community effort to revive the statue, but has stepped away because of her position as Tantramar councillor.
Hanson says the cost of his version of Shep costs $9300 before taxes, and paying for it is what brought Kara Becker, Mike Gillespie, and Maxc MacNichol to council on Tuesday. The trio are asking that the town of Tantramar chip in to help get the new Shep created by Hanson installed in the village square in time for this year’s Sandpiper Festival, some time around late July or August, when the birds come to feed.
Artist Robin Hanson stands beside his recreation of Shep the Sandpiper. Photo: contributed.
“We understand that during the transition, the budget allocated by the previous council to bring back Shep may have been cut,” said Becker. “This means a further delay in completing this project that has already been invested in by taxpayers.”
According to Dorchester Village minutes, up to $15,000 was allotted for the construction of the new viewing platform, which was completed in 2021. Though Dorchester village originally budgeted between $2000 and $2500 towards the Shep replacement, there is no money specifically for Shep allotted in the Tantramar budget this year. Tantramar and former Dorchester CAO Jennifer Borne says that a budget request for $60,000 was submitted by the village council to the provincial consultant who created Tantramar’s budget, but the item didn’t make it in.
But Borne has also talked about the flexibility inherent in this year’s Tantramar budget thanks to a lack of detail coming from the province, so it will be up to the new Tantramar council to determine how much support the town can provide to help Shep the Sandpiper makes her return migration to Dorchester this year. Becker says the group will help raise funds to cover any budget shortfall if necessary.
“There is certainly a curious void at the village centre,” said Becker. “The goal is that we work together and finally bring back Shep.”
For Robin Hanson’s part, Shep is ready to go. “She could be in Dorchester this afternoon,” said Hanson on Wednesday. The artist is also enthusiastic about helping with fundraising for the project, and even more so about a trip to Dorchester. “I just can’t wait to see the migration come,” said Hanson. “It’s very exciting. [We are] very, very fortunate to have such a migration go right through New Brunswick.”
Giant sandpiper statue returns to its roost in tiny New Brunswick village
FREDERICTON — A giant bird sculpture that once presided over a small New Brunswick village is back on its perch, and the former deputy mayor says the avian avatar looks happy to be home.
The sculpture of the semipalmated sandpiper dubbed Shep was the pride of Dorchester for nearly two decades before the original wooden statue started to rot three years ago.
Local officials commissioned a New Brunswick artist to build a replacement made of more durable materials, but struggled to bring it to town after the village was absorbed into a new municipality and payment was stalled.
Dorchester's former deputy mayor Kara Becker now says the new sculpture is in place after an organization came forward to pay the artist his nearly $10,000 fee.
A troop of three tied the new version of Shep to the back of a white truck and brought the big bird home on Saturday afternoon.
Becker says she thinks the bird looks colourful, plump and ready for the village's annual Sandpiper Festival this July.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 9, 2023.
The Canadian Press
Fly Away Home: fate uncertain for newly returned bird sculpture in Dorchester, N.B.
A giant sculpture of a bird that long ruled the roost in a small New Brunswick village has been restored to its rightful perch, but it’s not receiving a universally warm welcome home.
Residents of Dorchester, N.B., said they’re delighted to see the return of the statue locally dubbed Shep in honour of nearby Shepody Bay. But officials with the municipality to which the village now belongs said Dorchester’s avian avatar was reinstalled without permission, throwing its ultimate fate into question.
For now, however, former deputy mayor Kara Becker said residents are glad to have a refurbished version of the semipalmated sandpiper statue watching over the local landscape once again after three years away.
“She looks so beautiful,” Becker said of Shep in a telephone interview. “She does look different than the last version of it. She’s a bit more colourful, but she is just plump and ready for what’s coming.”
Standing 2.4 metres high and weighing 135 kilograms, the original incarnation of Shep kept a bird’s-eye view over Dorchester for nearly 20 years. But when the wooden statue began to rot three years ago, the village council commissioned New Brunswick artist Robin Hanson to craft a more durable version made of steel, epoxy and fibreglass.
Shep’s journey home got bogged down in what Becker described as red tape when the village became part of a new municipality earlier this year. The region of Tantramar took shape on Jan. 1 when Dorchester merged with Sackville and Pointe de Bute, and efforts to pay Hanson fell down the new council’s priority list.
Becker said media reports about efforts to reclaim Shep prompted several organizations to cover the costs with donations, noting one such group ultimately helped secure the sculpture’s return.
“The community support was really incredible,” she said.
Becker said Hanson offered to drive the statue up on Wednesday, but others were eager to have it back sooner. In the end, Shep rolled back into town in the back of a truck on Saturday.
But the new municipal authorities don’t appear to share local enthusiasm for the new sculpture.
“The municipality of Tantramar and its council did not commission this work to be done nor request or approve the installation of this statue on municipally owned land,” reads an emailed statement from Mayor Andrew Black.
When asked if the statue will be removed, Black said the issue won’t be discussed until municipal offices reopen on Tuesday.
Shep will have one ally on Tantramar’s Council — Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, who previously served as Dorchester’s mayor.
She said the town worked hard to bring the statue back, adding it’s in keeping with the village’s bird-friendly image and its location by the ocean.
About $10,000 was spent on it but the big statue of the little bird props up the local economy and “brings in dollars that are many, many, many times over,” she said.
Becker said she is afraid the statue might be relegated to a scrapyard or a storehouse.
“I’m so afraid they’re going to try to remove her,” she said.
Environmental advocates share her chagrin at the prospect, saying the statue could help raise awareness about a native species in decline.
Andrew Holland, spokesman for the Nature Conservancy of Canada, called semipalmated sandpipers a symbol of the upper Bay of Fundy.
About one-third of the world’s semipalmated sandpiper population stops on the bay’s mudflats for about three weeks toward the end of July where they get a break, rest and double their body weight before migrating to South America for the winter, he said.
The small birds, weighing about 20 grams, are listed as “near threatened” on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s red list.
“(The statue) serves as a reminder of the importance of the area. That these shore bird populations have been in decline in Canada, and all around the world,” Holland said. “And this is a critical home for migratory shorebirds.”
Nick Lund, a network manager for U.S.-based conservation group Maine Audubon, also feels the statue serves an important environmental purpose.
“These are small birds that don’t often hang out very close to people, and so are hard to see,” he said.
“Many people, if they see shorebirds at all, see them only as tiny specks off on the mud. I think for a lot of people this sandpiper statue might be the first time they can actually see one up close.”
Becker said Sandpipers are not just the subject of a local annual festival, but stand as an important symbol of resilience due to their ability to fly thousands of miles despite their diminutive size.
“We didn’t intend to ruffle feathers,” she said with a laugh.
“We just think we need our bird back.”
This report from The Canadian Press was first published April 9, 2023.
R.B. Bennett statue on its way to Ottawa
Artist Robin Hanson created statue to honour only prime minister from New Brunswick
That's the image local artist Robin Hanson wanted to depict when he crafted the statue R.B. Bennett, who was Canada's eleventh prime minister.
"He was a great orator, so here he is standing in the House of Commons hammering that point home," said Hanson.
Hanson and a handful of private sponsors took on the task of creating a statue of Bennett as a passion project. Now, the eight foot tall bronze statue s on its way to Ottawa with the hope that it will stand among the bronze statues of other Canadian leaders.
Kinsella was pleased to see his idea come to life.
"I was amazed by the details. If you look at the buttons on his jacket and the crease in his trousers, it's incredible how an artist can do this, and do this in bronze," said Kinsella.
Bennett served one term as prime minister from 1930-1935 while Canada was in the depths of the Great Depression. Voters blamed him for not doing enough to stop the bad economic times. He lost the 1935 election in a landslide and a generation of Canadians would associate him with the worst of times.
"He was Prime minister in the Dirty '30s. You couldn't have picked a worse time. Every leader of every nation was the thumbs down," said Hanson.
Hanson depicted him in a tuxedo. Despite a rocky term in the Depression, it is said Bennett always dressed impeccably. Bennett was the founder of Canadian institutions such as the CBC and the Bank of Canada.
He's off to a temporary storage facility in Ottawa until it can be decided upon which plot he'll be standing. There has been no word on how long that process will take, but Kinsella hopes he'll be facing eastward, toward New Brunswick.
Province stands by decision to appoint Jennifer Borne, not Jamie Burke, as Tantramar CAO
New Brunswick’s minister of local government reform has rejected an appeal for an independent review of the hiring process for the Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) in the new, amalgamated Town of Tantramar.
In a letter to Sackville Town Council released today, Daniel Allain writes that he stands by his decision to appoint Dorchester CAO Jennifer Borne to the position.
“I trust that you will support this decision and will continue to positively support the implementation of local governance reform,” Allain writes.
He was responding to a July 13th letter from Sackville Mayor Shawn Mesheau, writing on behalf of town council, urging Allain not to appoint Borne until an independent review had been conducted.
Mesheau’s letter suggested that the hiring process may not have been fair, objective and reasonable and asked Allain to meet with town council to discuss it.
Instead, Allain met with Mayor Mesheau alone on July 18 where Deputy Minister Ryan Donaghy reviewed the hiring process in a bid to show it was fair.
Today’s letter to town council from Allain outlines the hiring timeline, but with less detail than Donaghy provided to Mesheau:
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- May 26: both Dorchester CAO Jennifer Borne and Sackville CAO Jamie Burke were asked to confirm their interest in the CAO position for the Town of Tantramar.
- June 3: a hiring committee was appointed which included Sackville Deputy Mayor Andrew Black, Dorchester Deputy Mayor Robert Corkerton, Chris Milner, an appointed representative for the Sackville local service district (LSD) and Chad Peters, the provincial facilitator for local governance reform in Entity 40, now known as the Town of Tantramar.
- June 8: The hiring committee interviewed Jamie Burke and completed what is known as a “scoring matrix.”
- June 14: The committee interviewed Jennifer Borne and completed her “scoring matrix” and according to Allain’s letter, the hiring committee “finalized the evaluation of the candidates as well as their recommendation on the candidate most qualified for appointment” to the CAO position.
- June 15: Andrew Black resigned from the hiring committee.
- June 22: Jennifer Murray Consulting (JMC), an independent HR firm, which had been involved in the process from the beginning, provided information on reference checks to facilitator Chad Peters and the hiring committee’s recommendation was sent to Allain who then appointed Jennifer Borne.
Allain’s decision to reject Sackville’s request for an independent review is the latest in a series of defeats for town council since it wrote to the minister last December urging him to abide by his promise not to force the town into an unwelcome marriage with Dorchester, Point de Bute and surrounding LSDs.
Looks like Sackville residents will have little say over their new local government
Residents of Sackville, Dorchester and their surrounding communities will have little or no say in the composition of their new municipal council if the province sticks to its timeline for local government reform.
Plans call for initial decisions on the size of the new council, how its members will be elected and whether it will be incorporated as a town, to be made by Friday, February 11, in just over a week.
Decisions on outer boundaries are to be made even earlier, on February 4th.
“We’ve had an e-mail pushing those dates fairly hard,” Sackville Deputy Mayor Andrew Black told council’s committee on municipal reform during its first meeting last night.
Black, who is serving along with Mayor Mesheau on a provincial advisory committee which will hold its first closed-door meeting on February 8th, said that does not leave much time for consultation with members of the public.
“I get the feeling, based on history, that there is a certain way that the government and the minister’s department want the reform process to go and they don’t want to veer from that,” Black said. A timeline that appears on Sackville’s website shows that the initial decision about the name of the new municipality will also be made by February 11th, but Black says the province’s latest e-mail says nothing about a deadline for the new name.
The term “council composition” refers to the number of councillors and whether they will be elected at large (representing the whole municipality) or whether they will represent smaller wards.
Moncton uses a mixed system with two councillors elected at large and eight representing the city’s four wards.
No public consultation
Councillor Sabine Dietz said the 10-day timeline before decisions are made on February 11 shows that town council’s influence on the reform process is “extremely limited.”
“On top of that, our understanding was that there was some intent to engage the community, but that seems to have fallen by the wayside,” she added.
“I’m still hoping that there will be input possible, but we have to be very realistic that the end result is not ours, it’s not our decision,” Dietz concluded.
Councillor Allison Butcher agreed.
“I really, really believe in community consultation and I also really, really believe that it doesn’t matter how much consultation we do,” Butcher said.
“I think this is going to happen the way the province wants it to happen.”
Councillor Bruce Phinney echoed that thought.
“This is going ahead whether we like or not,” Phinney said. “We don’t have any say.”
Councillor Michael Tower compared the provincial reform process to getting on a bus.
“You’re hoping to get off in Moncton and they say, ‘Oh no, you can’t get off here, we’re going to Halifax.’
“‘Well how about stopping?’
“‘No, we can’t stop until we’re done.'”
Councillor Bill Evans called the province’s reforms “sleazy” and “undemocratic.”
“I think when you find yourself in a situation like this when you’re relatively powerless, you speak up and you call them out for what they’ve done,” he said.
“And you inform people about the likely consequence and you rally support.
“What you don’t do is provide cover for the people who are assaulting our rights and you certainly don’t actively assist them.”
Meet Chad Peters, the Tory PR guru hired to amalgamate Sackville, Dorchester & LSDs
A Moncton business consultant, who is a longtime Progressive Conservative, has been hired to create the new municipality that will include Sackville, Dorchester and surrounding communities such as Wood Point, Westcock and Pointe de Bute.
Chad Peters is president and CEO of Lynwood Strategies, a communications agency that helps its corporate clients protect and enhance their reputations partly by using social and traditional media and partly by aligning their “goals with those of government.”
in 2007, Peters ran unsuccessfully in a provincial by-election as the Conservative candidate in Moncton East. The Moncton Times & Transcript described him then as “a former businessman who works in Fredericton managing a team of policy and research analysts for the Tories.”
Peters has also served as manager of exploration at SWN Resources, the Canadian subsidiary of a Texas oil and gas company that was drilling test wells for shale gas in New Brunswick. The company ran into trouble in 2013 when resistors from the Elsipogtog First Nation blocked its trucks and occupied the land, actions that led to a violent confrontation with the RCMP.
In 2016, more than a year after a newly elected Liberal government imposed a moratorium on fracking, Peters was laid off when SWN Resources pulled out of New Brunswick. That was the year that he founded Lynwood Strategies.
Peters, who was in Sackville Wednesday for a closed-door meeting with town council, declined to be interviewed for this story
“All media requests need to be directed to the Department of Local Government and Local Governance Reform,” he wrote in an e-mail response to my phone messages.
Secret meeting
“He may be a nice guy, but he’s doing a bad job in the sense that he’s been hired to do a bad job,” Councillor Bill Evans told CHMA news after Wednesday’s meeting with Peters.
“He seems like a nice guy,” Evans added. “But if someone comes into your house with a gun and he’s polite, does he get credit for that?
“I mean that’s how I feel about this, this is like a hostile takeover,” Evans said referring to the forced amalgamation.
Councillor Sabine Dietz agreed with Evans about Peters’ role in the process.
“Just remember that he has absolute power over decision-making,” she said, adding that although two advisory committees are being established, Peters doesn’t have to listen to anything they say.
“The little bit of influence that the advisory committee can have, it’s only pretending in this process because there are very clear power dynamics.”
Dietz said that Peters’ title of facilitator is misleading because under the new local governance reform act, he’s hired to act as a representative to implement what the provincial government wants.
“When you’re a real facilitator, you are supporting a process, you are not the decision-maker; you have the power of guiding a process,” Dietz added. “But he has absolute power, what he decides, goes.”
Mesheau more upbeat
Mayor Shawn Mesheau sounded more hopeful after Wednesday’s meeting with Peters.
“We’ve been dealt a hand of cards here that maybe we’re not happy with, but we have to play those cards and move it forward,” he said.
Mesheau explained that one of the advisory committees would consist of elected and appointed representatives and the other of municipal staff.
He said that although initially Sackville was given only one representative on the first advisory committee, Peters seemed receptive to the idea of allowing the town to have two and that he’s hoping that both he and Deputy Mayor Andrew Black will serve on it.
That committee would make recommendations on such issues as the name for the new municipality, how many councillors it would have and which areas they would represent.
The other committee of municipal staff would make recommendations on municipal operations.
Mesheau says that the amalgamation process is designed to build a foundation for the new, amalgamated municipality.
“We’re being grouped with other communities,” he adds. “Ultimately, when it comes to building that foundation, we do have to have consensus within that group…I’m hoping that we can find consensus to build that foundation to move things forward.”
Note: (1) During Wednesday’s meeting, Chad Peters gave permission for the release of his power point presentation. To view it click here.
(2) According to the government website,
Peters is overseeing four other municipal units: amalgamation of the
Village of Salisbury & surrounding LSDs; amalgamation of the Village
of Port Elgin & surrounding LSDs; amalgamation of the villages and
LSDs around Alma and whatever changes they’re making to the Village of
Petitcodiac.
Wednesday, 12 April 2023
YO Higgy Methinks Mayor Andy Black and his buddy Billy Steele know they ain't fooling many folks in Dorchester N'esy Pas?
Sandpiper Shep returns to Dorchester perch amid questions & controversy
After a three year absence, Shep, the world’s largest semipalmated sandpiper, returned to the village square in Dorchester on Saturday, even though Tantramar town council has not approved installation of the giant statue or allocated money for it.
“I’m calling it The Dirty Bird,” says Bill Steele, who operates the Dorchester Jail Bed & Breakfast, only a stone’s throw from the statue.
“I mean it’s a great tourist draw and that’s good for me, but it’s being done without following proper procedures,” he says. “The village council didn’t commission the artist and never approved the project.”
Steele points out that when Dorchester was amalgamated with Sackville and three rural local service districts, the province drafted a budget that had no money in it for the sandpiper statue and the new town of Tantramar hasn’t approved any for it either.
“The statue was municipal property taken without any permission – repaired – and reinstalled without any public money,” Steele wrote in an earlier Facebook message.
He says he has filed a formal municipal code of conduct complaint against local Councillor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell raising “questions behind how our public asset got in the hands of private citizens with no authority in place.”
When reached by telephone, Councillor Wiggins-Colwell said she hadn’t heard about Steele’s formal complaint against her and emphasized that citizens were overwhelmingly behind the effort to get the statue back in the village square.
“I can say this has been an ongoing project for two years and finally Shep is here in a bird-friendly town where tourism is so important,” she said, referring further questions to Kara Becker, a former deputy mayor in the village who has been leading efforts to reinstate the statue.
“There’s a lot of community support,” Becker said during a telephone interview. “We’ve raised enough money to pay for Shep three times over.”
She notes that she appeared before Tantramar council on March 14th asking it to collaborate with citizens so that the statue could be restored in time for this year’s Sandpiper Festival and the return of the migrating shorebirds to the Bay of Fundy in August.
Although Mayor Andrew Black said he understood the economic importance of the statue and the desire to get it back, Becker complains that there was no follow up from the town and when she e-mailed later to ask about citizens donating to the project, she received this response from CAO Jennifer Borne:
At this time Tantramar is not able to accept financial donations or any donation that requires a tax-receipt post-reform as a result of the formation of a new entity. In addition to this, Tantramar Council has not accepted this particular project.
“So, we just went ahead and put the statue back because it’s so important to us,” Becker says. “It’s pretty much the only thing we have.”
Meanwhile a report from the Canadian Press news agency quotes an e-mailed statement from Mayor Black:
“The municipality of Tantramar and its council did not commission this work to be done nor request or approve the installation of this statue on municipally owned land.”
The news agency report, carried by Global news, adds that when Black was asked if the statue would be removed, he replied that the matter won’t be discussed until municipal offices reopen on Tuesday.
“I predict it will be taken down in the next few days,” Bill Steele tells Warktimes.
But Kara Becker warns that protesting citizens would be out in the streets waving placards to defend it.
To read the full report from the Canadian Press, click here.
For an extensive CHMA background report as well as information about Oromocto artist Robin Hanson, who created the $9300 statue of Shep, click here.
13 Responses to Sandpiper Shep returns to Dorchester perch amid questions & controversy
YO Higgy Methinks Mayor Andy Black and his buddy Billy Steele know they ain't fooling many folks in Dorchester N'esy Pas?
Mitton, Megan (LEG)<Megan.Mitton@gnb.ca> | Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 3:00 AM |
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | |
(le français suit)
This brief message is to let you know that your email has been received. Thank you for reaching out and sharing your comments and concerns with me. If this is an urgent matter, please call my Constituency office: (506) 378-1565 or the Fredericton office: (506) 457-6842.
For media inquiries please contact (506) 429-2285. - - - Ce bref message a pour but de vous informer que votre courriel a bien été reçu. Je vous remercie de m'avoir contacté et de m'avoir fait part de vos commentaires et de vos préoccupations. S'il s'agit d'une question urgente, veuillez appeler mon bureau de circonscription : (506) 378-1565 ou le bureau de Fredericton : (506) 457-6842.
Pour les demandes des médias, veuillez communiquer avec le (506) 429-2285.
Megan
Mitton (elle / she, her)
Députée de Memramcook-Tantramar |
Responsable en matière de la santé, le logement, le changement climatique, et les droits humains. MLA for Memramcook-Tantramar | Advocate and Critic on files including Health, Housing, Climate Change, and Human Rights. Le Nouveau-Brunswick est situé sur les territoires traditionnels, non cédés des Mi’kmaq, Wolastoqiyik & Peskotomuhkati. | New Brunswick is situated on the unceded traditional territories of the Mi’kmaq, Wolastoqiyik & Peskotomuhkati. |
David Amos<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> | Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 3:00 AM |
To: "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, Andrew.Holland@natureconservancy.ca, Daniel.J.Allain@gnb.ca, "Holland, Mike (LEG)" <mike.holland@gnb.ca>, a.black@sackville.com, dan.murphy@umnb.ca, b.phinney@sackville.com, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "David.Akin" <David.Akin@globalnews.ca>, "bruce.wark" <bruce.wark@bellaliant.net>, jean-francois.leblanc@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, bbachrach <bbachrach@bachrachlaw.net>, TheBirdist@gmail.com, macxjack@gmail.com, hansonartgallery39@gmail.com | |
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, megan.mitton@gnb.ca, jborne@dorchester.com, d.beal@sackville.com, b.goodwin@sackville.com, m.beal@sackville.com, Eric.Hanson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca | |
Tantramar council votes not to remove Dorchester’s sandpiper statue
Sandpiper Shep will stay on her perch in Dorchester’s village square after Tantramar council voted unanimously tonight not to remove her.
At the same time, council directed the town engineer to confirm that Shep was installed safely “with the understanding that the statue is not a municipally owned asset at this time.”
“I want to make it clear that leaving the statue in place increases the town’s risk,” Mayor Andrew Black told council.
“It puts the Town of Tantramar at an insurance and liability risk.”
Black said that in his opinion, protecting the public purse and lessening or mitigating risk are two of the most important roles of members of council.
He was commenting on the fact that the sandpiper statue was not commissioned either by the village of Dorchester or the town of Tantramar and was installed Saturday on municipal property by private citizens without authorization.
CHMA reports that Robin Hanson, the Oromocto artist who created the new fibreglass Shep, says he was approached by former Dorchester Mayor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell acting on behalf of local volunteers who later raised the money to pay for the $9300 statue.
During tonight’s Tantramar council meeting, Mayor Black said “it sets a precedence of a lack of respect for the decision-making process.”
He also said it threw the process for requesting proposals and quotes for municipal projects “out the window” in violation of laws such as the provincial procurement act and the town’s procedural bylaw.
“Normally, something like this would go through a process and we would in fact own that piece of property, but we don’t, so we had to try to figure out the best way to approach that,” Black told reporters after tonight’s council meeting.
Meantime, Councillor Wiggins-Colwell said she could not comment at this time.
Dorchester resident Bill Steele told Warktimes on Saturday he has filed a formal, municipal code of conduct complaint against her.
Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black blocks a vote on who will be his deputy
In a move that surprised many observers, Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black prevented council from electing a deputy mayor at its first meeting on Tuesday.
“We have just sat as the new council of the Town of Tantramar,” Black said.
“We have not had an opportunity to interact with one another. I would like us to be able to know each other and have an understanding of who we are as councillors and as council, before we make the decision of who would be the deputy mayor,” he added.
Black was responding to a motion from Councillor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell who sought to add the election of deputy mayor to Tuesday’s council agenda.
She pointed out that the bylaw governing council procedures requires it to elect a deputy mayor at its first meeting.
However, changing the agenda requires unanimous approval, and after all other councillors had voted to change it, Black asked clerk Donna Beal: “Do I vote as well?”
In the past, Sackville mayors have voted only to break council ties, but the new procedural bylaw imposed by the province allows the mayor to vote on every issue.
“I will vote nay,” Black declared defeating the motion to add the election of deputy mayor to council’s agenda.
However, he told reporters later, that he’s uncomfortable with the bylaw that gives the mayor a vote and would rather provide information and guidance.
“Voting on an issue I think, it’s just not me, it’s just not what I would want to do,” he said.
Black added, however, that it will be up to council to change the bylaw.
“I might have my own ideas about what I would like to see,” he said, “but if council passes the bylaw saying that the mayor should vote, then so be it.”
Black said the election of a deputy mayor could take place at council’s next meeting later this month.
7 Responses to Tantramar Mayor Andrew Black blocks a vote on who will be his deputy
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So, the rookie Mayor subverts the will of Council as his first act. It seems according to the Mayor, that Council will only be able to play with the toys after showing they get to know each other. Or does his preferred candidate for Dep not have the requisite votes yet? I wanted to reach out to Mayor and Council on this issue but their Town email addresses were not publicly available as of this writing. All this bravado about “ready to get to work” after the swearing in last month, was really what?
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I believe you have nailed it once again Mike. You’d have to be from another planet to not know who he will try to get the position of deputy. He knew that something had been in the works I’m sure and had put a bandage over it for a couple weeks. I sure hope these new councillors can see past this and get a deputy elected other than the one obvious pick he would make. Definitely a bad look early for those who voted for him. Maybe a look at what’s to come.
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“If I get stoned and sing all night long, it’s a family tradition” Hank Jr…,
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The Local Governance Act has always indicated that the Mayor has a vote unless otherwise determined by the local government under their procedural by-law. This, as we know, is a new Local Government which now serves a new Town so things have changed and there is a new way of conducting this local government’s business that better aligns with local governments throughout the province.
I am sure UMNB is well aware of this need to ensure more uniformity in having local governments conduct their business in order to ensure delivery of services to their residents.
Maybe the issue here is not who implemented the bylaw, or when a mayor can vote, it is the requirement for a unanimous vote by council to add an item to the agenda.
Lots of learning for this new Mayor and Council as it tries to disengage from how business used to be done in the former local governments and how it will need to be done in the new local government.
Local Governance Act
Voting
66(1) Subject to this Act, each member of council present at a meeting shall announce his or her vote openly and individually, and the clerk shall record it, and no vote shall be taken by ballot or by any other method of secret voting, and every vote taken in that manner is of no effect.
66(2) Despite subsection (1), a local government may, in a procedural by-law made under paragraph 10(2)(a) or in a municipal charter or private or special Act of the local government, provide that the mayor shall not vote except to have a casting vote in the event of a tie.BY-LAW NO. 2022-03
A BYLAW RESPECTING THE PROCEEDINGS OF TANTRAMAR MUNICIPAL COUNCIL AND COMMITTEE MEETINGSXIII. MOTIONS
11. After the Mayor has counted the vote, the Mayor shall declare whether it was “carried”, “carried unanimously” or “defeated”. Except where provided for in this bylaw or by the applicable legislation, a majority vote of the Members present who are eligible to vote, shall decide a motion or question before the Council. If the vote results in a tie, the motion will be considered defeated. -
And so the meek has inherited (in his mind) the earth. Let the games begin!
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His Worship has demonstrated himself to be a person who is perhaps a bit too picky about who he works closely with, and not picky enough about who he alienates…
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Perhaps. He spent his time as Councillor as part of a solid voting bloc and no one, including local media raised an eyebrow. Now that two of his allies are no longer there, he seems to attempt to revive that arrangement by trying to form an alliance on the new council (with those that are like minded). He gratuitously thanks the Rural Health Action Group (where his principal campaign advisor thankfully volunteers) but painfully ignores any credit whatsoever to Horizon Health. He’s called out both the NS and NB govts for remaining silent on the Chignecto Ithmus issue – these are levels of govt to work with in the future. I truly hope he grows into the job but past behaviour seems to indicate that he more interested in performative advocacy and empty gestures.
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https://warktimes.com/2023/01/
Tantramar Town Council says no to holding a public question period
At its first meeting tonight, Tantramar Town Council voted against amending its agenda to allow members of the public and media to ask questions.
The agenda did not include the public question period that has been a tradition in Sackville for at least 30-years because the new council was operating under a procedural bylaw imposed by the province.
Councillor Michael Tower moved a motion, seconded by Councillor Allison Butcher, calling for a public question period to be added to the agenda.
“I would like to add at the end of the meeting a question period for the public or the press to maintain our transparency,” Tower said.
He suggested that during the recent municipal election campaign, candidates had spoken in favour of openness.
“I think losing this question period takes away transparency,” Tower added.
The motion to amend the agenda to include a public question period required unanimous consent. Councillors Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, Matt Estabrooks and Bruce Phinney voted no.
Mayor Black then explained that the new council was operating under a bylaw imposed by the province.
“I’ve heard that it’s pretty much standard across the province,” he said, adding that the new council can now look at its bylaws “and potentially change them if we need to.”
During an interview later, he said that he personally favours holding a public question period, but that council itself would have to make that decision.
Communications officer
CAO Jennifer Borne told reporters after the council meeting that Tantramar will be reviewing its bylaws.
“If there’s any potential amendments, any feedback that comes in, certainly any information will go into the files for potential amendments going forward and council can review them,” she said.
In an earlier e-mail to Warktimes, Borne wrote that Tantramar welcomes public and media interest in local government.
“Under the new organizational structure, we will have a Corporate Communications position that will be dedicated to providing information to the media and public on decisions of council,” she added.
She later assured reporters that the new communications officer would not replace the council question period, but would create opportunities for public engagement and feedback.
A step backward
Mount Allison Professor Geoff Martin, who specializes in the study of local governments, wrote in an e-mail that “it’s a real step backward not to have a question period, an outrage even.”
Martin, who served on Sackville Town council from 1998 to 2004, adds it gives citizens a chance to question the people they elected.
“This is supposed to be the order of government closest to the people, and the only one that ‘does not rule on behalf of the King,'” he added.
“This is supposed to be a democratic government, not a soulless corporation.”
7 Responses to Tantramar Town Council says no to holding a public question period
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Why have a question period? We’re in Sackville New Brunswick, where we don’t care what people think. We’ll tell them what they should think.
In fact, meetings shouldn’t even be open to the public.
This would eliminate the need for elections, too!
Sackville, where Council questions You!!
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We are off to a flying start. So much for election promises. Of course, there should be a public question period at the beginning and end of every council meeting.
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Virgil – as a former Councillor, what are your thoughts on the Mayor delaying the vote to appoint a Deputy Mayor?
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Oh sure… but I still remember when you were town councillor raising some questions about the amount of smartgrowth being built in the centre of town by John Lafford and how your fellow town councillor Margo T. King “shushed” you from speaking… oh Virgil.. those were the days… early 2011 I believe… could have even been late 2010… the culture of shushing only got worse.
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OK folks! A little juvenile
Council is supposed to be directing the agenda not the provibce or the Mayor. In politics perception ls everything and not having a question period because the province mandated it as a starter bylaw , and besides others are doing it, sounds might mean the $1200 a day carpet bagger Chad Petersons is calling the tunes. But council gets one more chance to communicate to the provincial government that you do not plan to be mere creatures of provincial governments. Does this mean that when the actual budget that is due in March will also be shoved down your throats like your just another advisory committee? The day the finances are tabled you need to demand that the province know that it will be open to the public and not editorialized by the Mayor otherwise be prepared to either resign en mass or spend four years being part of an illusion presented to you as local governance.
Ummmm the Deputy Mayor???
In the former Village of Dorchester, the councillor with the highest number of votes is offered the position. Otherwise council elects the Deputy Mayor. The Mayor appoints portfolios but does not appoint a Deputy Mayor; but if he desires an inclusive council, the mayor might suggest council nominate a councillor from the former LSDs .The party has started. You have been elected by us to serve citizens, not bureaucrats. It is unfortunate that you are in one of the top three corrupt states in North America as mentioned at a MtA guess speaker that deals with these matters. I Think it was a Mr. Bowser who lives in Riverview. Tantramar might want to hire him just so my new identity starts with a clean slate. Get your brooms out. -
I have read the new bylaw and under presentations it is noted that an individual or group can address council. So there is an opportunity to ask questions.
IX 4 does note individuals or groups wishing to address council by appearing at the meeting with no previous registration should sign in at the door and will be called in the order they register. They will be given 2 minutes each. It does not say you can not ask questions and it appears that it would ensure that the time is well spent for questions and answers, as opposed to using question periods as soap boxes.
As for the media asking questions, not sure why continuing on with the informal media scrum that was always happening can not still take place. Maybe a more formally media scrum could be organized by media and members of council could make themselves available after the meetings.
Again this is not about what the mayor calls a provincially imposed bylaw. It is about doing business differently in order to be more effective in addressing community service needs and concerns. This is a new process and it must be given time to work and councillors and mayor must be supportive in helping it along.
Proper communication will be needed so residents understand the process and are able to address council in a public meeting.IX. PRESENTATIONS
1. The Presentations portion of a Council meeting shall provide an opportunity for individuals to appear as a formal delegation or on their own to make brief presentations to Council on matters within the subject matter jurisdiction of Council.
2. All individuals or groups wishing to address Council and wishing to be listed on the meeting agenda should register with the Clerk at least seven (7) calendar days prior to the date of the meeting, providing their name, topic of concern, and indicating whether there has been any previous contact with a member of Council or Administration regarding the matter. The Clerk will be responsible for preparation of the Council Report Form, if required, for all registered presentations from members of the public. In order to ensure system compatibility and that Members receive all required materials in advance of the meeting, any presentations requiring the use of audio/video technology must be submitted to the Clerk at least three (3) business days prior to the date of the meeting, otherwise they will not be accepted for use at the meeting.
3. Registered presentations shall be limited to five (5) minutes each, followed by questions from Members if applicable. When individuals wish to appear before Council during a Public Hearing, their presentation shall be limited to five (5) minutes.
4. Individuals or groups wishing to address Council by appearing at the meeting with no previous registration should sign in at the door and will be called in the order they register. No audio-visual presentations will be permitted for unregistered presentations. Unregistered presentations shall be limited to two (2) minutes each, followed by questions from Members if applicable.-
Thanks Shawn. It’s nice to have the facts laid out rather than read sensational articles that mislead the public.
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UPDATED: Goodbye Dorchester Village, Hello Ward 1: hope & dismay
With the Village of Dorchester about to disappear, local candidates for the new Tantramar town council are talking fondly of Shep, the sandpiper statue that once stood as a symbol of village identity.
“Shep’s been gone now for a couple of years,” says Deputy Mayor Robert Corkerton, one of two candidates competing for the single seat in Ward 1 that includes Dorchester and surrounding communities.
“It got to the point where Shep was rotten right through,” he says, adding that the village council has explored various options for replacing Shep.
“People come to Dorchester to see the sandpipers when the birds are here, but also to stop and see Shep, the same as the lobster out in Shediac,” he says.
“He’s been there for 20 years and people want him back.”
Dorchester’s Mayor Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, who is also running for the Ward 1 seat on Tantramar council, says she’s been talking with the sculptor who created the original, wooden Shep as well as artists in Calgary who work with more durable materials.
“I’m looking at two options, either the Calgary group that would do it in fibreglass or we’re looking at bronze, the same as [George] Stanley is in Sackville,” she says.
“I’m hoping maybe the bronze will be our option, but that’s something we have to work towards,” Wiggins-Colwell adds.
Both candidates suggest they would take up the need for a new Shep at Tantramar town council after it takes office on January 1st.
They say the sandpiper statue is crucial not only for Dorchester’s sense of itself, but also for its ongoing appeal to tourists who flock to the Nature Conservancy’s shorebird reserve at nearby Johnson’s Mills to witness the birds’ annual August migration.
Identity loss
But even as the candidates talk about the symbolic and practical need to restore Sandpiper Shep, voters in the village and the small communities around it, worry that Dorchester is about to be lose its identity anyway as the village is swallowed up by the larger and richer town of Sackville.
“I’ve actually heard it said from people in Sackville, when the amalgamation process started, that ‘We don’t want Dorchester,'” says Neil Harris, a retired salesman who returned home to the village three years ago after a 48-year absence.
“My concern is that some people in Sackville are just going to sweep us aside,” he says.
Harris’s concern is shared by Wayne Feindel who served for more than 30 years on the village council — his last three terms as Dorchester’s mayor.
“This community will not be run and looked after the way it is now,” he says.
“Dorchester is a tightly run organization [and] with no money, they’ve done miraculous things,” Feindel says.
“There’s no way this bigger group will be able to run this community as well as it was done even with more money to the people who are running and to the mayor, a nice little bribe to try to get people involved, but you have to have something deeper than that if you’re going to run for your community,” he says.
(Feindel’s “nice little bribe” refers to the tripling of salaries for elected representatives on Tantramar’s new council.)
As Sackville becomes the “centre of gravity” in the new municipality, he says the focus will inevitably shift to it.
“A town with so many resources, with doctors and lawyers and people in every field and stores and all that, they have no sense of anything beyond Sackville and I don’t see that changing overnight.”
When combined with the growth of centralized bureaucracy in an expanded Southeast Regional Service Commission and with only one representative on council, Feindel foresees the disappearance of volunteers rooted in the local community.
“The volunteers are just not going to be here, like with the Sandpiper Festival and stuff like that,” he says.
Dorchester will become “a soulless place,” he predicts.
Hope for a bright future
But Tantramar Ward 1 candidate Debbie Wiggins-Colwell says that Dorchester getting swallowed up by Sackville isn’t a worry for her, at least not yet.
“I don’t look at it that way, you know,” she says, adding that all parts of Tantramar can collaborate and work together.
“That’s how I’m looking at it, going into it,” she says.
“Now maybe you ask me this at the end of three years, it might be entirely different, but right now, that’s how I look at it.”
Wiggins-Colwell says she foresees a future in which natural beauty and community-run events like the Shiretown and Sandpiper Festivals combine to bring the citizens of Tantramar together.
“I mean we’re not even 13 kilometres from Sackville,” she says, adding that the round trip on Rte. 935 from Dorchester to Rockport and Wood Point is stunningly beautiful.
“That’s my happy place,” she says. “I love it.”
Cross promotion is key
Candidate Robert Corkerton is also hopeful as he points out that the village has already built a solid set of stairs and railings in anticipation of Shep’s return along with crowds of tourists eager to pose for photos on the newly built platform beside him.
He says his 16 years on the village council would help guide his efforts to help promote the many attractions in the new town including the Nature Conservancy shorebird reserve, Sackville’s Waterfowl Park and Farmers Market, Fort Beauséjour as well as the ice cream and other attractions at Trueman’s Blueberry Farm.
“We have such an opportunity to say, ‘What do we have? How can we promote this? Where are our air B&Bs, where are our hotels and motels and what can we do to cross-promote everything?’
“What can we do to bring people here to Tantramar?” he asks. “How can we make it a destination spot, so people will want to come in and spend their money here?”
‘Losing out’
With election day only three weeks away, it remains to be seen which of the two hopeful candidate messages will resonate most with voters in Dorchester and its surrounding communities.
Aaron Stright, who recently returned to the Dorchester area after 10 years away working as a welder in Alberta, says he’s not optimistic at all because Sackville will be the centre of the new town.
“Most of the people in Sackville don’t seem to have Dorchester’s interests in mind,” he says.
“We’re stuck out on the side and nobody really wants to think about us and now they’re going to be controlling more of what goes on here,” he adds.
“A lot of people are worried about losing out because Sackville’s going to get more than we do.”
All-candidates forum
Both Robert Corkerton and Debbie Wiggins-Colwell appeared at the all-candidates forum held on Saturday, November 12 in Middle Sackville.
Here is Robert Corkerton’s two-minute opening statement:
I’m a resident of the current Village of Dorchester and have lived there for the past 20 years. I live there with my wife Lise and our four children. I’m originally from England and moved to Montreal when I was a young child. This is where I learned French and I’m fully bilingual. For the past 16 years, I’ve had the honour of being a member of the Council of the Village of Dorchester. Over that time, I’ve worked on different portfolios, and the constant being recreation programming and playing fields. I’ve served on the the board of Recreation New Brunswick as representing the village, a provincial NGO for the recreation in the province. I’m currently in my 20th year serving as a leader in Scouts Canada having held different positions throughout the years. I’m a volunteer with the Dorchester Food Bank and new as of this year, I’m also the director for the junior programs for the Moncton Black Tide Rugby Club. I’m looking to serve because I feel the experience on council and other boards and my understanding of governance workings will be an asset to help bring Tantramar into existence and set it on a good path for the future.
Here is Debbie Wiggins-Colwell’s opening statement:
I am the last mayor for the Village of Dorchester and first female mayor also. I’ve lived in Dorchester for over 50 years, raised three of my children there, had owned my own business and my husband and I opened a second business in the village square of Dorchester. I am now retired. I have many years of volunteering under my belt, most recently, including the founding board member of the Greater Dorchester Moving Forward and in 2017 was honoured by receiving the Molly Kool Award for Outstanding Contributions by a woman in the southeast part of New Brunswick. And I am now ready to serve as first councillor for Ward 1.
To read Debbie Wiggins-Colwell’s campaign brochure, click here.
To read Robert Corkerton’s campaign brochure, click here.
To listen to Erica Butler’s CHMA interview with Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, click here.
To listen to Erica Butler’s CHMA interview with Robert Corkerton, click here.
8 Responses to UPDATED: Goodbye Dorchester Village, Hello Ward 1: hope & dismay
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Great article as usual Bruce. It is also worth mentioning that everyone in the new town has a vote for mayor–if you live outside the old town of Sackville boundaries, make them earn your vote. In my experience, one smart person can make a lot of difference on a council of 9. Whoever wins this ward seat, you will have your constituents behind you to make sure that all areas of the new town get their share. Use your voice and vote and deny unanimity and silence if your constituents are being ignored. Early on, like in the City of Miramichi in the 1990s, insist that municipal assets in Dorchester be used instead of being sold and centralizing everything in Sackville. Maybe a town department should be located there, for example. With technology it is even easier now…
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I agree.
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It did not take long for incomplete information to get posted in the local election.
The facts about “Shep” not being replaced by the Village administration are far more than a case of “Rotten Wood.” Already the candidates failed to state the replacement process was begun by the previous Village Administration in 2019 and was not completed in a timely manner before other issues arose which ensured the demise of the 20 year old village icon.
As a member of the Sandpiper Festival’s organizing committee, I was asked in 2019 to arrange for the shipment of the statue of “Shep” to Fredericton for repairs before the winter set in.
I proceeded to follow the committee’s request and the artist was contacted and agreed the timing was right, transport was arranged and all that was needed was for the Village Administration to arrange for the equipment to lift the statue off the foundation and place it on a truck I had available, which they had agreed to do.
With my part done, I waited until January 2020, at which time I was informed by the Village Administration, not the festival organizing committee, that they were taking over the project.
The statue sat there for months before it finally was shipped for repairs. After further investigation, it was determined that, because of the delay in shipping and being outside through another winter, the statue was deemed unrepairable.
The Village Administration made the decisions behind closed doors and what we have today is a beautiful podium and a very expensive project that could have been avoided. Now the administrative and financial discussions and decision making will begin all over again. All of which could have been avoided.
On the positive side, Ward 1 now has the largest and sharpest looking outdoor, all-weather podium in the entire province of New Brunswick. It is my hope that the “Shep Podium” will attract Activists, Political and Social Speakers where they can mount and declaim their aspirations to the large crowds that will visit Ward 1 to hear them and have their pictures taken as past visitors did for 20 years of “Shep’s” existence in the community square.
This is just a small issue, but I’m wondering if more accurate and creditable information will be presented pertaining to bigger issues in the future.
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Thanks for telling the whole truth about that Max. I think often the toxic positivity spin applied by government is what puts constituents off the most. Elected officials need to tell the whole truth and take responsibility when they make mistakes.
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I have been very impressed by the newsletters put out by Greater Dorchester Moving Forward Co-op. The variety of endeavors undertaken is truly inspiring. I hope that the energy behind Moving Forward will make sure Dorchester is not left out in the new municipal organization.
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“Most of the people in Sackville don’t seem to have Dorchester’s interests in mind,” he says…. Not with me as Mayor, this is my home. I ran because I don’t want the smaller communities being overlooked and I thought that might end up being the case. I run the Westmorland Historical Society, in Dorchester. No one should feel like their community’s identity is going to be lost.
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The Town of Tantramar is a collective of different villages and towns to be honest… economically speaking the government just wanted a tighter control of governance so just consider this is an opportunity to co-mingle with like-minds in the area instead of feeling separate and distant you are part of a larger body of homies… I find it amusing how ‘identity’ is tied up in postal codes.. maybe its because I have lived in other places in Canada and in England.. this area is ready to bloom… just enjoy the journey together and don’t worry so much… Bonnie Swift will make a fine mayor for this new entity as I think she brings a more common sense approach to the job and I will vote for her and Bruce Phinney and Wendy Epworth and look forward to seeing how this new body of representatives takes this as an assignment to take the reigns for the region as a collective of homies… these are people with more in common than they might think and there is going to be some really good collaborations taking place. Please stay positive and don’t let the “Eeyores” out there get you down.
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Collaborations ordered from the top down in good old teutonic fashion by corporate directors is not a cooperative adventure. It is corporatism or as defined by John Ralston Saul ‘facism’. The Unconscious Society .
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Bonnie Swift promises as Tantramar mayor to end secrecy, promote citizen engagement
Bonnie Swift says she decided to run for mayor of the new town of Tantramar because she wants to end the secrecy that has prevailed in Sackville’s local government.
“Actually, it was the biggest thing that motivated me to run, get the information to the people,” she said yesterday during an interview with Warktimes.
“I want the public to know what their town is doing and how they’re managing everything inside that town.”
As one example of secrecy, Swift points to the $28,000 Montana report on how to end bullying, harassment and favouritism in the Sackville fire department that has never been released to the public.
“I want to see the Montana report, what I can see, what I’m allowed to legally see, I would want to see,” she says, adding that the town government has been too closed.
“I mean that report is probably under lock and key in some CAO desk somewhere,” she says.
“If something’s not functioning right or people are being harassed and abused, as a mayor, I would want to know about that.”
Swift also says firefighters need better protection as whistleblowers.
“Whistleblowers are very important to the functionality of everything,” she says, “and I really didn’t like the silencing of the fire department.”
Swift notes that under Sackville’s whistleblower policies, firefighters are expected to report their concerns to senior management even when those managers may be causing their problems.
“As Mayor no whistleblowers will ever be silenced,” Swift writes in her platform document entitled “Fighting for Open Government.”
‘Citizen engagement’
Bonnie Swift addressing Sackville council last June
Swift’s platform position on “citizen engagement” partly reflects the circumstances that led to her appearance before Sackville town council last June as a member of Concerned Citizens.
The 35-member group called unsuccessfully on council to re-open a zoning change clearing the way for the AIL plastic pipe plant on Walker Road.
Concerned Citizens pointed out that residents of the area were not notified about the development before council held a public hearing on the zoning change before finally approving it.
In her mayoralty platform, Swift writes it’s a good example of the municipality’s poor citizen engagement process.
“One of the largest developments, if not the largest development, is currently happening in our town, yet almost none of the citizens in the region knew about it until the massive 18-acre clear cut took place,” she writes.
During our interview, Swift criticized town council for failing to do any research in order to answer residents’ questions about the potential effects on groundwater, air emissions or traffic in the area.
“I think, because the council is the first line of defence, you can’t rely on other levels of government, it’s your responsibility to keep the community safe, to keep the environment safe and to take care of public welfare,” she says.
“So, if you are not doing that, you’re not representing the people.”
Swift promises that if she’s elected mayor, “these types of inadequate practices will stop” because “poor engagement creates a lot of distrust with both the Council and the developer.”
Drive-thrus
Swift points in her platform to what she calls the “double standard” on climate change.
In 2001, Sackville town council passed a bylaw banning any further fast-food drive-thrus next to the TransCanada highway, a ban that it re-affirmed in 2016.
“I don’t think it’s fair to prevent a small business from expanding or having a drive-thru due to idling cars if you are going to have large manufacturing facilities go in without questioning their environmental footprint,” she writes referring, for example, to greenhouse gas emissions from the manufacture of plastics.
“Nobody in our council ever asked what the climate footprint of the plastics plant would be,” she says.
“We should have fair processes that evaluate everything, everything should be put under a climate lens, big business, small business, whatever comes into town; if we’re going to have a climate lens for this, let’s put everybody under it fairly or nobody under it at all.”
Fracking
Swift does not mention fracking for shale gas in her platform, but during our interview, she said that as an environmental engineer, she knows that the public has received a lot of misinformation about it over the years.
That’s why she paid for a full-page ad on fracking in the Sackville Tribune-Post in 2012.
“I believe people should know the truth,” she says. “I worked on 1,200 fracked wells in groundwater protection and so, I know the industry.”
Swift says the critics had never worked on even a single shale or natural gas well.
“So, I thought who better to get the actual good, bad and ugly out about this industry,” she explains.
“I wanted people to know what’s involved, what we do to protect the environment and what the real risks are…
“I’ve never had to remediate a site because of fracking, ever.”
Swift acknowledges that there are some risks to fracking, mostly because of surface contamination, but says industry practices have now minimized those risks.
“I certainly don’t believe you should be fracking in the middle of a town, but if there’s remote locations where they’re developing wells, you know, there’s a possibility then,” she says.
“Is fracking right for Sackville?” Swift asks. “I don’t know. If people don’t want it, they don’t want it, but they should know everything about it before they make that decision.”
Update
Bonnie Swift visited her hometown of Dorchester on November 1st to talk to about 25 people who attended the Tuesday Neighbour Café at the Moving Forward Co-operative on Station Street.
“This is what a community should look like, I don’t want smaller communities like Dorchester to be ignored,” she said.
“I have an ear and as mayor, I would listen.”
Swift grew up in Dorchester, one of six children in a working class family.
To read more about her background as well as her position on issues such as the hospital and heath care crisis, affordable housing and climate change as outlined in her 10-page campaign platform document, click here.30 Responses to Bonnie Swift promises as Tantramar mayor to end secrecy, promote citizen engagement
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Excellent! Thanks Bruce and Bonnie – lovely to see a very ethical lady running!
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Thanks so much Kata.
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It’s great that we have a capable third candidate for Mayor. Recent news, reported by Erica Butler at CHMA radio, is that the advisory committee secretly recommended to the provincial “facilitator” in August that the new Tantramar mayor and councillor salaries be TRIPLED over the current Sackville rate. This recommendation has been accepted and presumably this will be inserted into the 2023 Tantramar budget by the facilitator. This is new spending of well over $100,000 per year.
One of the things that I will be looking for in candidates is for them to say “this is wrong and if I am elected we will re-examine it and hopefully a majority will agree to roll it back to something more reasonable.” In 2024 at least, if 2023 is now set in stone (thanks to Higgs and Allain).
If Bruce will indulge me ….
Hefty raises on the way for new Tantramar mayor and council » CHMA: https://www.chmafm.com/welcome/hefty-raises-on-the-way-for-new-tantramar-mayor-and-council/ -
Bonnie Swift’s platform for Mayor of Tantramar is a refreshing, articulate statement of principles that bespeak a candidate who will dedicate herself to transparency in all circumstances that permit it. This is clearly someone who will work with Council to restore the democratic functioning of our local government. It is time that the citizens of Tantramar have a trustworthy Mayor and Council who together will work to guarantee, to the extent possible, an honest, open and respectful environment for the difficult years ahead dealing with the downloaded financial burdens imposed by the provincial government.
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Wow,finally someone who is ethical and will represent what is best for the welfare of the community .Making good decisions based on doing the research and what is the right choice for the safety and health of the community is a challenging job. ..Here is a candidate that is willing to put the hard work and an honest approach into what is right and best ,not try to sneak things in that benefit certain people that have a hidden agenda that is self serving.Bonnie would be a very good asset to a step in the right direction for this community.They would be fortunate to have someone of her rare integrity and calibre as Mayor of Tantramar!
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I read your article but I only see that Bonnie is running for Mayor of Sackville.There is no mention of Dorchester and the other areas that make up the new Tantramar region. She only talks about what she will do for Sackville.
We live in Middleton and if our taxes are going to increase I want some, at least a fraction of the money go to other areas besides Sackville.
Since moving here 8 years ago we are seeing a revitalization of the Dorchester area with new farming (Willow Farms, Homestead Farms, etc), B&Bs, plus Greater Dorchester Moving Forward Co-operative & Station 8 Community Fridge to name a few. Recently the Dorchester Daycare Center had to move to a new location because it had out grown it’s original space. This means there are new people moving to the area. Many older homes are being renovated for instance Lady Smith Manor and several residences in Dorchester & Middleton.
Dorchester wants to be known as a place for people to come, stay and enjoy what it has to offer and not as a Drive Thru community.
So I would like to hear what Bonnie & the other candidates are going to do for Dorchester & area and remind them that we are a part of the region as well as Sackville. We want our “share of the pie and not just the crumbs.”
We may not have the population of Sackville but we have heart and care about our community!-
I believe that the point of the newly named united “entity” of Tantramar is based on relative distribution of population, I fail to see how Bonnie Swift’s platform can be construed to be detrimental to any one of the five communities that make up the township of Tantamar. The new town councillors will need to work together to ensure the needs of the whole are equitably met in all its parts. Remember that the four units outside Sackville proper have four voices on council, equal in numbers to the four voices of the the Sackville councilors. In other words, the four outlying communities have the same weight and voice as the community of Sackville.
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You might like to know that Bonnie Swift is from Dorchester and is one of the old school women — she has common sense and wisdom and kindness on her side… I like her… I know her husband.. these are sound thinking people. We could do a lot worse on this first Tantramar mayor’s run… think hard about what you want for your area and work towards it with others — we are literally all building this new world, not the politicians… stay positive! Thanks for your comment.
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Thanks, Kata, I really don’t get Carolyn comments. I grew up in Dorchester, I am the President of the Westmorland Historical Society in Dorchester. I pour tons of volunteer hours into Dorchester every year. As President of the WHS, I manage the Keillor House and St. James Church. We also host numerous and large events in Dorchester all the time. Also manage historical properties like the Bell Inn and the Payzant Card. Our society host the public library in our Payzant card building. Currently, I am the only Mayoral Candidate who is actively engaging in Dorchester and has been for years. I work with Meriam Andrews at the Lady Smith on various town activities all the time. We are on the same board.
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I grew up in Dorchester, I am the President of the Westmorland Historical Society there. I pour tons of volunteer hours into that community as their President. I manage the Keillor House and St. James Church. We also host numerous and large events in Dorchester all the time. I also manage the Keillor House Museum and St James Museum as well as many of the historical properties like the Bell Inn and the Payzant Card. Our society hosts the public library in our Payzant card building. I am speaking at Dorchester moving forward tomorrow. It would have helped to ask me Candidates before posting something like this. I am the only Mayoral Candidate who is actively engaging in Dorchester and has been for many years. I work with Meriam Andrews at the Lady Smith on various town activities all the time, we are on the same board. Ask the Citizens like Alice Folkins about me, she was volunteer of the year there and we work together continuously. Dorchester in my hometown and I care about it deeply. Dorchester is one of reasons I ran. I don’t want smaller communities being ignored.
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Interesting that Bonnie Swift is both for (pipe plant) and against (fracking) the precautionary principle. Not always possible to have it both ways in public office.
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Wrong she didn’t say that. She said she is for all industrial development when done right. She is against the lack of public engagement with the citizens and the double standards this town applies when evaluating small and large business for climate change. Since most of the citizens up there didn’t know about the plastic pipe plant, she is pretty bang on about that. If you read her platform that should have been abundantly clear.
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So she’s pro fracking? Great. Just what we need…
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I worked on Nova Chemicals Polyethylene plant in Joffrey, AB. It is one of the biggest manufactures of polyethylene thermoplastics in Canada. The only difference was the town, and the developer actively engaged the citizens. Whereas the citizens of Sackville had no clue what was happening until they saw, an 18-acre clearcut and people started to ask what is happening here? After working on hundreds of industrial developments across western Canada this was one of worst examples of citizen engagement in a small town I have ever seen. It’s the town’s public engagement processes I am concerned with, not the industry. When you are an engineer consulting firm you do not pick and choose who you work for, you work for all types of industries. The town did the citizens a huge disservice and the backlash they are getting is well deserved.
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There is usually no point to trying to talk facts and analysis to people who are enjoying a sense of moral superiority in their own ignorance, but I’ll give try. Hydro-fracking is a common engineering practice that environmental engineers use remediated contaminated sites when contaminants are bound to heavy soils. Water well drillers will use it to increase the flow rate of water wells. It’s used in mining as well. It’s used in numerous industries. It is a necessary engineering tool for many types projects. Look up hydrofracking for remediation.
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Wow Bonnie, that’s a pretty harsh response. I’m surprised someone who hopes to represent us all as mayor is so quick to get in a flame war with a constituent. I’m not sure I can support that kind of behaviour in a mayor. Would you?
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She’s just what we need. She speaks in facts and they were being rude. We have bigger issues than hydro-fracing that the town banned in 2012 anyway. It is a moot point to even talk about it. Everything else she wants to achieve is bang on.
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Ignorance? Really, Bonnie? We know (as in, that is the scientific consensus) that the industry vastly understated the amount of methane that escapes into the atmosphere from fracked wells. And how pernicious, if shorter-lived, a GHG is methane? Very. And what about the chemicals that are shot down into the earth along w sand, etc.? We can’t even learn what these are because the industry claims this info as proprietary. Sounds like a good case for the precautionary principle, as most NBers agreed when they turfed-out the Alward government.
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Tim would probably instruct his students to protest fracking and pipelines and oil sands and energy projects that aren’t solar panels and windfarms … but Tim would never mention a peep to his students about how wrong it is that so much Saudi oil flows into New Brunswick.
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I agree and we take more oil from Saudi Arabia every year. From a Country with no human rights, no women’s rights and no environmental rights.
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If you read my article in 2012 than you would have known that all chemicals are all pretty much food and household grade now. I posted a list of ones used and there are only about a dozen.They are only applied at 0.1%. There is nothing proprietary about them at all. Oil and gas is regulated by the province it has absolutely anything to do with municipal government. Plus, why would you assume I am for us against any industry? I am for the proper facts and information getting to the public so they can make wise decisions. I clearly said this industry is up to the people. If people don’t want it they need to speak to their MLA’s this has nothing with our municipal government the provincial government issues the licenses for this industry.
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On another note here are all the the additives.Soooo proprietary. Not!
-Calcium chloride (food preservative)
-Xamthagum polymer (food additive used in gluten free baking)
-Sodium bicarbonate (common baking soda)
-Polyamide fatty acid blend (fatty acid blend similar to linseed oil)
-Carboxymethyl cellulous (food thickener used in ice cream, also used in toothpaste)
-Bentonite (a fine clay soil used also used in kitty litter)
-Barite (used in barium drinks for X-rays of the digestive tract )
Base oils (environmentally sensitive synthetic oil)
-Calcium hydroxide (lime used in lawn fertilizer and cement)
-Sodium Hydroxide (used food curing)-
Just because something is safe as a food additive doesn’t make it safe to drink. Salt being an easy example.
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The water is not left in the ground all the water is pumped back out of the steel and concrete well casements and then taken to treatment facilities. So why would any have to drink it? That makes no sense. These casings to protect the groundwater are 4 feet of steel and concrete and pressured tested before operations to ensure they don’t leak.
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In reading your platform I see no mention of any other areas except Dorchester and Sackville. Living in neither of these communities can you explain what you are going to do if elected as mayor for the other communities now becoming a part of Tantramar. Midgic, Middle Sackville, Westcok, Point de Bute, Jolicure etc ?
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Thanks Karen, I am contacting the reps from these areas so I can get out to present to them. I will be in Baie very soon. I will post the date. I am speaking with other ward candidates as well. On my “Bonnie Swift for Mayor” Facebook page. I will be providing those dates. What ward are you in?
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I appreciate the response. Ward 5
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I am very pleased to see that a third person has taken up the challenge to run for mayor this is important to all the communities involved.Im afraid for years that a lot of these issues have not been handled on a consistent basis and a lot of issues seem to be based on who wants what.One that really needs more input is our volunteer fire fighters jumping out of bed at 3 or 4 am m/f to respond to life saving calls be respected and treated in a professionally manner with respect .Thank you for your service
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I have been speaking to several firefighters and I will be fighting for them. They know I have their backs.I will be taking up this issue up. Don’t you worry they are one of my top priorities. They will not be ignored by me.
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https://www.chmafm.com/
Fly Away Home: fate uncertain for newly returned bird sculpture in Dorchester, N.B.
Giant sandpiper made of steel, fibreglass, epoxy — and a dash of controversy
Commissioned by former Dorchester village council, fate of sculpture now in hands of new municipal entity
At 2.4 metres tall and weighing around 135 kilograms, or 300 pounds, the big statue of a tiny shorebird dwarfs the 75-year-old man who made it.
The sculpture is constructed of steel, fibreglass, epoxy — along with a dash of controversy.
It was crafted to replace another giant semipalmated sandpiper that once stood in Dorchester, a small village around 42 kilometres southeast of Moncton, near the New Brunswick-Nova Scotia border.
The sculpture was based on photos of female semipalmated sandpipers in full breeding plumage, a time in their lifecycle where their feathers are at their brightest. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
Shep was named for the nearby Shepody Bay, where every summer hundreds of thousands of shorebirds come to feed and rest on their way south. There are several spots where sandpipers can be seen, including Johnson's Mills near Dorchester — where there's an interpretive centre and shorebird reserve — as well as Mary's Point and Hopewell Rocks.
"This bird is quite interesting," said Hanson from his workshop in French Lake, approximately 40 kilometres south of Fredericton.
"Its migratory range is right up to the Arctic and then all the way down to South America, the lower part of South America."
For about 20 years, Shep represented the relationship between the community and the sandpipers.
The area's mud flats are a critical stopover for the migrating birds, classified as a "near threatened" species because of a decline in population, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
The birds are tiny, only weighing between 20 and 30 grams. But when they leave the area, they're much more plump after feasting on mud shrimp.
"They basically double their body weight," said Hanson, who has created statues for different communities over the years.
Three years ago, the original wooden Shep started to suffer from the elements. With its body rotting, the Village of Dorchester opted to take Shep down for refurbishment.
Debbie Wiggins-Colwell ran is now a councillor for the new entity of Tantramar, and she's determined to see the new Shep get approved. (Submitted by Debbie Wiggins-Colwell)
The mayor at the time, Debbie Wiggins-Colwell, along with the three councillors, opted to have the bird returned to the artist who created it to be rebuilt, Monty MacMIllan. But she says a break-in at the man's shop in Maugerville left him unable to complete the job.
"He had his tools stolen," said Wiggins-Colwell.
So a new Shep was commissioned, and Hanson was able to build a completely new Shep from materials that won't rot.
He based Shep 2 on photos of female semipalmated sandpipers in full breeding plumage, a time in their lifecycle where their feathers are at their brightest. And he focused on creating one that was plump from feeding at Shepody Bay.
The only problem is that local governance reforms have now halted the project.
Tangled Transition
When amalgamation placed Dorchester within the new community of Tantramar, complete with new councillors and a new mayor, support for a giant sandpiper required a second look.
Wiggins-Colwell ran and won as a councillor for the new entity, and she's determined that Shep's approval sticks this time.
The original statue of Shep had to be taken down three years ago due to rot. (Submitted by Kara Becker)
"He's very important to us and we're working, I'm working diligently with the new council and going through the necessary steps in order to have Shep back in time for the sandpiper festival which will happen at the end of July," she said.
When asked for comment on the issue of the prematurely approved sandpiper statue that will cost $9,300 plus tax, Mayor Andrew Black would only say "no comment."
On March 14, the topic of Shep was on the Tantramar council meeting agenda. Kara Becker gave a presentation as part of the public feedback process as to why Shep should be approved.
Kara Becker submitted a presentation to the Municipality of Tantramar advocating for the approval of the $9,300 plus tax to pay for the replacement statue. (Submitted by Kara Becker)
"The reason I presented on behalf of the community was that this sandpiper has been missing for over three years," said Becker, who grew up in Dorchester and now lives in Dieppe.
"It's really important that we focus tourism and economic development in the Tantramar region," she said.
"We're really under-leveraging the opportunity that this brings," said Becker, who also served on Dorchester's council before amalgamation.
A closer look at a semipalmated sandpiper at Johnson's Mills Shorebird Reserve and Interpretive Centre. (Jordan Myles)
No decision on the statue has been made yet.
Meanwhile, Hanson said he's confident everything will work out and isn't concerned about immediate payment while Shep's situation gets sorted.
Becker and Wiggins-Colwell say they're both hopeful the platform where the original Shep perched in Dorchester will not remain empty for much longer.
Shep is paid for with loose change left over.
Dorchester(Tantramar) would achieve something from the amalgamation exercise.
Facilitation would be achieved !! A win! - Win!
This is one more example of ‘bikeshedding’. Elected officials should focus on the important stuff (like climate change) but instead waste time on fibreglass birds.
https://whatsthepont.blog/2011/11/06/bikeshedding-prospering-in-your-committees-parkinsons-law-of-triviality/
Great little video Harold as it certainly relates to the lack of communication and discussion with citizens and councillors here in town with major projects, like the current $5 million flood mitigation project that is about to get underway.
The plans, as drawn, will effectively reverse the Industrial Park area storm water flow by sending it towards town and into the existing water holding pond adjacent St James Street. That major fact was not revealed by the consultant.
The project will also enable siltation to totally seal off the outlet at Aboiteau AB-01, behind Russell Metals that discharges into the Tantramar River, within the first year, because the existing flow of flushing storm water will be taken away.
We will then only have ONE working aboiteau, that being the undersized AB-02 behind Armtec, to evacuate storm water from our downtown area. Methinks this is ‘bikeshedding’ at it’s best when $5 million is being spent on a project that will only worsen our possibility of storm water flooding and so little time is being spent actually having this very expensive project explained to anyone.
Now back to BIG BIRD!
Everything is art and art is everything.
I think most locals realize that this complaint is just the result of a sore loser.
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. Let’s get real. Move the bird to another place. Bigger fish to fry. No, make that birds not fish.
Sandpiper Shep has driven the council Koo Koo . There is no turning back from Koo Koo .
Is this a case of citizens overriding council? Well, perhaps and so be it as council refuses to listen and rather enjoys dictating.
A tempest in a teapot! Just another example of casuistry employed to bury historic realities. The construction and seating of the now iconic Shep was instituted under the authority of the Village of Dorchester ‘s Village Council, long before Premier Higg’s municipality act reconfigured the landscape of New Brunswick, bolstered by its removal of the new entities’ powers to self-govern in full (such as barring citizens from asking questions at Council meetings!)
When Shep was unseated for concerns about its decay, the monument was still within the authority of the Village Council. And, I would daresay, was the idea to replace it. Little did the villagers expect that they would be left bereft of seeing that aspiration realized by the political maneuvering of their provincial government. Let’s imagine, for example, that the Sackville water tower were to be tumbled by a tornado. Would the township of Tantramar be forbidden from proposing a replacement of the crucial infrastructure? Yet the once independent town had provided one half the cost of the $2,430,242 project.
The point is that the refurbished Shep has a right to be put back on her throne, and I for one, would be happy to help to see that happen, as I suspect a number of others in the area would be so inclined. Not a donation! A restoration! Just the way it was and should be. Down with casuistry!
Peter – Thank you. That is exactly the point.
People, people people ! What are you thinking? :”Shep” the sandpiper is more than bronze, wood or fiberglass. Shep didn’t even star in the 1965 movie THE SANDPIPER, about a cross-cultural; marriage. Shep isn’t even about Jessica Glasner’s timeless World War Two story the Voyage of the Sandpiper.’ Shep in fact represents three decades of the whole village of Dorchester striving to protect and promote their unique place in history. Shep is indeed the result of hard work, many meetings, a school auditorium filled with everyone, and of every age from Rock Port to Breau Creek. A total commitment from a tri cultural village mostly shunned by Sackville and even recorded in the former Town of Sackville’s Town meetings. The impetus and the work of involved citizens kept councilors and their mayor darting back forth like the Sandpipers at Johnson’s Mills . Then one day the tide came in for the Village.. It is a certain irony that the Sandpiper Festival was launched by controversy ranching from a cartoon of the Mayor promoting a “leviathan piper:” to be erected in the square to international rage that the famous Sandpiper Stew would include actual sandpipers. Finishing off by assuring everyone that there also was no Mud from Johnson’s Mills in the mud pie desert.. Today due to no small part transmitted through the internet the image of Shep Dorchester is part of the Fundy Biosphere Reserve includes the local local school as a UNESCO sponsored educational site helping maintain the world class foot print that Doug Howe wrote for the Reader digest. In the year 2017 Federal and provincial governments chose Dorchester to celebrate the 150th Anniversary. At a historical heritage fair where five Dorchester students won the staggering amount of $700 dollars for their Bi-centennial essays. If if you can erect a bronze Cattail statute. I think SHEP even If just fiberglass deserves a place in local history. The Dorchester D-Day Dodgers who when serving on village council meetings around a couple of card tables all the while debating with great dissonance to prove who was right, but how to protect the truth. I know by the 1970’s my Dad and others were wondering if winning was worth the price they paid.. Duty and self reliance coupled with courage and loyalty now substituted by actions that involved replacing what worked with what sounded good. This is for another day_ EDUCATION.
Totally off topic, but I just saw your name. I’m assuming you are the teacher Mr. Feindel. I was a student of yours in the late ’90s in Dorchester and just wanted to say thank you for everything you did while I was a student. I loved your classes!
Lynsey you are most welcome. Those days were the best of times because students like yourself were very self reliant and had solid footing to leap forward into the world. Junior high high was the best fun ever. Take care
Terrific to see the good people of Dorchester take the initiative and instal their bird. Well done. I am fan of this worthwhile artwork [no plaques about climate change needed]. There is definitely money to cover costs for installation – lots and lots of money right? Remember what Mayor Shawn Mesheau was quoted as saying:
““We are setting the foundation for the generations to come. How exciting is that!” declared mayoralty candidate Shawn Mesheau. “Our population will be 9,100 and our tax base $1 billion.” Maybe we should get this little quote made in to fridge magnets to distribute throughout Tantramarshire.