Riding changes 'disrespect' communities, critics say
Electoral boundaries commission will release a final report in February
CBC News
Posted: Mar 7, 2013 2:07 PM AT
Last Updated: Mar 7, 2013 2:55 PM AT
Related
The Electoral Boundaries and Representation Commission will release a final report in April. (CBC)New Brunswick’s Electoral Boundaries and Representation Commission ran into stiff opposition to its proposed riding map from several groups and politicians on Wednesday in Fredericton.
The independent commission was given the task of cutting the number of ridings to 49 from 55 and then creating a new map of the province’s ridings.
The commission was also given strict guidelines on how many people could be in each of the 49 ridings.
Chris Baker, a Fredericton resident and former senior civil servant in the provincial government, said he isn't happy with what the commission has come up with.
"We think that the boundaries that they're proposing, fly in the face of historic principles, traditional values and disrespect the communities of interest in our area,” he said.
Specifically, Baker said the commission created a series of rural-urban hybrid ridings. He said it will be difficult for MLAs to represent these ridings.
“The differences in between urban and rural New Brunswickers can be strikingly different even though they may live in relative proximity to each other,” according to Baker’s presentation to the commission.
“Likewise, just as members of our two linguistic communities share many of the same views, there are important differences that need to be respected, if not recognized, in the way these communities are represented in the legislature.”
Baker, along with a “volunteer, non-partisan group,” offered a counter proposal to the commission, which he said would better reflect the communities of interest around the province.
He said the group’s proposal closely resembles the current riding map, while still adhering to the legal constraints imposed by the provincial government.
Jean-Marie Nadeau, the president of the Acadian society, said the new electoral boundaries do not consider the needs of different linguistic communities.
'Equality' of linguistic communities missing
“I don't understand how the spirit of the equality of our two communities is not at all present in that,” Nadeau said.
“I don’t live in Saskatchewan, I live in New Brunswick. Let’s create a modern New Brunswick for all our people helping each other in respect for each other.”
Nadeau said there are regional complexities that appear to be ignored in the commission’s preliminary report.
"You know, it’s like putting Charlo with Petit-Rocher. It’s not that the people of Petit-Rocher [don’t] like Charlo and that Charlo doesn't like [Petiti-Rocher], it's only that it doesn't fit,” he said.
When designing the new map. the commission was guided by an electoral quotient of 11,269, which was the number of voters divided by the 49 ridings.
Each proposed riding had to be within plus or minus five per cent of that quotient.
The commission’s preliminary map formed six regions: Northern, Miramichi, Southeast, South, Capital and River Valley.
Of those regions, Northern will lose 1.5 seats; Miramichi, South, Capital and River Valley will all lose one seat; and Southeast will lose a half a seat compared to the old map. (The half seat distinction is because the old map straddles regional boundaries.)
The commission will send its final report to the legislature and the changes will be in place by the 2014 provincial election.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Trudeau raises environmental questions over pipeline
- Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says a proposed west-east pipeline project will not go forward unless it addresses key environmental concerns. more »
- Rothesay man charged with 2nd-degree murder
- Adam Prest, 39, has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his common-law wife Tanya Shand in Rothesay on Wednesday. more »
- Full-time public intervener created for energy issues
- Attorney General Marie-Claude Blais is ending the practice of hiring private lawyers to represent the public on energy-related regulatory matters by creating a full-time public intervener. more »
- Guards in constant conflict over treatment of Ashley Smith
- Two corrections officers who were responsible for Ashley Smith in the months leading up to her death testified on Wednesday that they were in constant battles with management about how the Moncton teen should be treated. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma murder case to plead not guilty
- The lawyer for Mark Smich says the Oakville, Ont., resident will plead not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man who disappeared earlier this month after taking two men on a test drive of his truck. Smich was charged today, after Dellen Millard of Toronto was also charged with first-degree murder. more »
- 2 more arrests linked to hacking death of British soldier
- WARNING: This story contains graphic content. Two more people have been arrested by officers investigating the hacking death of a U.K. soldier in London, say British police. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford splits with chief of staff
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has parted ways with his chief of staff, the latest development in a tumultuous week at city hall where the pressure is growing for the mayor to comment on crack cocaine allegations raised by two media outlets. more »
- Rothesay woman killed in domestic homicide
- Rothesay man charged with 2nd-degree murder
- Man arrested for selling fake bus passes on Kijiji
- Kent Homes in Bouctouche lands its largest contract
- Fitch faces new questions over trust fund use
- Glut of Tory bills meant to stifle debate, Liberals allege
- Vandals spray-paint profanity on CFB Gagetown tank
- Sale of Edmundston mill good news, mayor says
- Paramedics unable to revive Chinese student, inquest hears

