Friday 19 April 2024

Environment Minister Gary Crossman quits cabinet and as MLA

 

Environment Minister Gary Crossman quits cabinet and as MLA

Hampton PC says his beliefs ‘no longer align’ with direction of party, Higgs government

Environment Minister Gary Crossman is resigning as a Progressive Conservative cabinet minister and will quit as an MLA within days, citing his differences with Premier Blaine Higgs.

Crossman, who had already announced he would not run in this year's election, made the announcement in a Facebook post. 

The three-term MLA for Hampton said he wanted to make his health a priority but also made it clear he's not happy with Higgs's leadership.

"My personal and political beliefs no longer align in many ways with the direction of our party and government," he said.

Crossman turned down an interview request from CBC News, but in a brief phone conversation suggested that he had been tempted to leave last fall.

"It was time," he said. "I stayed with it about six months longer than most would have."

He wouldn't elaborate, but last fall Crossman said he wasn't happy with how the nomination race to succeed him was unfolding in the new riding of Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins.

He had backed Hampton deputy mayor Jeremy Salgado to become the PC candidate, but Salgado dropped out citing what he called "the misalignment of my beliefs and values with the current structure of our party."

Instead, Christian conservative activist and broadcaster Faytene Grasseschi was acclaimed over the opposition of the local PC riding association.

Crossman told CBC News last December he wasn't sure he would vote for her.

He made his announcement just days after he spoke on his department's 2024-25 budget estimates in the legislature.

With his PC colleague and former cabinet minister Trevor Holder planning to give up his seat before the legislature returns in May, the PCs will be reduced to 26 seats in the legislature compared to 20 opposition MLAs.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

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

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
Round TWO 
 
 
21 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
Welcome back to the the circus 
 
 
Ed Franks
Reply to David Amos
Thanks I had to make some popcorn. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Ed Franks
I stocked up on peanuts to share with the forgetful elephants in the room


Marcel Belanger
I wonder if he’s just the first of all those who’ve said they won’t run again.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Marcel Belanger
Perhaps you should review some old news items 
 
 
 
 
SarahRose Werner
If Higgs loses the election this fall - and me personally, I wouldn't place money on the results either way - then the NB PC party will have one last chance to return to its Progressive Conservative roots when they choose their next leader. Otherwise, Progressive Conservatism is dead in New Brunswick.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to SarahRose Werner  
FYI I have been saying for nearly a year that Allain will be the next Leader/Premier but you would already know that if you were not ignoring me Correct?
 
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
Reply to David Amos 
Hi David I too have been saying that BUT. Hold on because I think you'll see Danny run Federally in Moncton.it willbe goodbye yo Ms Petitpas Taylor 
 
 
MR Cain 
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky  
Taylor will be the next PM!  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky  
Now thats Interesting
 
 
David Amos  
     
Reply to MR Cain   
Back away from the pipe 
 
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to MR Cain  
Intersting thought...why do you think that, MR? 
 
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to MR Cain 
Whoops..sorry..meant MR Cain 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky 
It was just another one of his pipe dreams
 
 
 
 
Frank Wadden
Getting off that sinking ship! 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Frank Wadden 
Wouldn't you??? 
 
 
Ed Franks 
Reply to David Amos
I would. I have alot of respect for our finance minister Bill Morneau after he threw himself under the bus.  
 
 
David Amos   
  
Reply to Ed Franks 
I have no respect for him whatsoever


 
 
JOhn D Bond  
No surprise in this. Can't wait for Oct, ABH will be the game day mantra. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to JOhn D Bond 
I doubt you will have to wait that long 
 
 
 
 
Dacre Gushue
 I will wait for the usual suspects to show up... All the great minds.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Dacre Gushue 
They were here already
 
 
 
 
Dacre Gushue 
 
Lets have an election now so we can stop trying to sway the electorate with hit pieces. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Dacre Gushue 
IMHO All the rhetoric coming from Higgy these days reaffirms that the writ will be dropped very soon and we will be voting during Apple Blossom Time 
 
 
Al Clark  
Reply to David Amos
Quixotic. Kinda describes outhouse's biggest client east of ottawa eh?  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Al Clark  
I know a man who lives in Lamancha 
 
 
Al Clark  
Reply to David Amos 
Just because you discovered his email address?
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Al Clark  
I bet you don't know his cell phone number
 
 
 
 
Dacre Gushue 

The spin doctor is at it again. Everyone knows Gary was leaving.. Loyalty is dead in politics. Actions have consequences.. So much pandering to special interest groups. We will get what we deserve in the end for being so unintelligent.
 
 
Kyle Woodman
Reply to Dacre Gushue 
Hahaha. You really believe what you just wrote? 
 
 
Dan Lee
Reply to Dacre Gushue  
And to think you won the race.  
 
 
Le Wier
Reply to Dacre Gushue 
Who Outhouse?
 

David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Should I call this Round Two??? 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Le Wier
Say Hey to him for me will ya? 
 
 
Le Wier
Reply to David Amos
I don’t know him 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Le Wier
Doesn't he send you emails like does to many others? 
 
 
Le Wier
Reply to David Amos
Oh yes he does, Higgs, and Williams. I sent an email years ago to my MLA who was PC, and then all of a sudden these emails from the PCs came. I asked to be removed from the list but they just keep coming. So now I read them and share what they say.  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Le Wier
I crossed paths with him years ago and called him as soon as I knew he was in the backrooms in NB He was surprised that I still had his cell phone number
 
 
 
Round ONE
 
 
Comments (When I refreshed the page I found myself on Round TWO)
 
 
24 Comments 
 
 
 
David Amos
The plot thickens


 
David Amos
IMHO All the rhetoric coming from Higgy these days reaffirms that the writ will be dropped very soon and we will be voting during Apple Blossom Time 
 
 
David Amos
Methinks if Salgado opts to run as an Independent with Crossman acting as his campaign manager he could win bigtime N'esy Pas? 
 

Kyle Woodman
Reply to David Amos
I'm wondering if we will see a slate of independent candidates from the old PC party.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Me Too



Buford Wilson  
He'll be missed.

My old friend Gary is one of the best environment ministers we ever had.

 
David Amos
Reply to Buford Wilson  
Oh my my I didn't know you were a local dude 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Buford Wilson 
I bet you two know this dude very well 
 
https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/video/1.1709750 
 
 
 
 
Don Corey
Interesting that the same article is here in duplicate. Yet another confirmation of a glitch in the system.
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to Don Corey 
Or is it deliberate? 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
I'm back
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
Its not deliberate. However CBC has been deliberately ignoring I exist since 2004 Now this ex PC dude is running again 
 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/tory-turned-liberal-john-herron-loses-1.503884



 

Allan Marven

Hopefully jt gets the hint too.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Allan Marven

What Hint? 
 
 
 

danny rugg

Who is next? Step right up! What's keeping you there Sherry Wilson? And you too Greg Turner? Will MLA'S with canes be the new fashion trend?
 
 
David Amos

Reply to danny rugg  
You seem bitter 
 
 

Allan Marven

LOLOU  
 
 
 

Les Cooper

Let them all quit. Saving us $$
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Les Cooper
How so? 


 
 

valmond landry

we have always been run by one man so why the big fuss?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to valmond landry

Who is we?   
 
 
 

Gary Webber

I see the liberals winning a minority and Higgs resins, yay

 

 

danny rugg

Reply to Gary Webber

All 49 seats minority.

 

 

Allan Marven

Reply to Gary Webber

If he had any class he'd do like Mckenna and quit to avoid the humiliation.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Allan Marven
Franky Boy quit after he won the Hat Trick 
 
 
 
 

Jack Straw

The ship is sinking Blaine.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Jack Straw
Do ya think he cares?
 
 
 
 

Jay Miller

 Higgsy ….. it’s time you stepped aside, and let good, honest politicians run the PC Party of NB, or it will be a “Déjà Vu 1987” clean-up!

 

 

David Amos
Reply to Jay Miller
"good, honest politicians"

Thats an interesting expression

 

 
Greg Miller 
For those that wanted a new government -- it looks like you are going to get it -- whether the Conservatives get back in or not.  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Greg Miller 
I say Higgy will win another minority then quit as leader
 
 
 
 
Andrew Martin 
3 years... he got his pension.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Andrew Martin  
Mr Outhouse may earn a pension too It depends on the deal he made with Higgy




Kyle Woodman
Wheels are really falling off now Higgy. He's going to lead his party to a resounding defeat. I now lots of people like Gary Crossman, lifelong PC party loyalists. That aren't having any of it any more.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Which Woodman are you???
 
 
 
MR Cain  
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!  
 
 

Ex-Tory MP seeking N.B. Liberal nod after 'very' conservative takeover of Higgs's party

FREDERICTON — A former two−term Progressive Conservative member of Parliament is seeking the New Brunswick Liberal party nomination to take on a Christian television host who he says is pushing the province’s Tories to the fringes of right−wing politics.

John Herron said he was urged to seek the Liberal ticket for Hampton−Fundy−St. Martins by a "broad and unlikely" coalition, including the "biggest chunk" of New Brunswick Progressive Conservative riding associations.

If nominated for the Liberal party, he would go up against Progressive Conservative candidate Faytene Grasseschi, whose Christian views he said have caused "considerable angst" among Tories.

Grasseschi, he said, reflects the "very" conservative takeover of the Progressive Conservative party of Premier Blaine Higgs.

"I think among my Tory friends in Hampton−Fundy−St. Martins, there is a concern that there has been an excessive shift to the right — to a party that’s far more conservative, that’s based more on ideology than ideas," Herron said.

"And it is quite conceivable that if the coalition of support that I think is building in Hampton−Fundy−St. Martins, around our candidacy, our coalition, that the conservative nominee may end up essentially being positioned as a mere fringe candidate."

Grasseschi, who did not agree to an interview, was acclaimed in December as the Tory candidate in the riding, galvanizing supporters by focusing her campaign on the Higgs government’s changes to province’s policy on gender identity in schools. That policy requires students under 16 to get parental consent before their teachers can use their preferred names and pronouns. LGBTQ advocates have called the policy discriminatory, while Higgs and his supporters say it protects the rights of parents.

The gender identity rule sparked a revolt in Higgs’s caucus and the resignation of several ministers, but the policy is what drew Grasseschi to run for the party. Grasseschi’s Christian television show airs on nine networks and she is the author of several books, including "Marked," in which she discusses that gay marriage could lead to humans marrying dogs. Several videos posted on YouTube show her using her faith to heal people, speaking in tongues and purportedly bringing a person back to life.

Despite Herron’s conservative past, he isn’t a stranger to the Liberals. He was elected twice in the New Brunswick riding of Fundy—Royal as a Progressive Conservative member of Parliament, in 1997 and 2000, but sat as an Independent in 2003 following the party’s merger with the Canadian Alliance to form the Conservative Party of Canada. He ran as a federal Liberal in the riding in 2004 and lost.

Herron, president of the New Brunswick Business Council, said he feels "compelled" to re−enter politics after two decades, adding that his campaign will focus on increasing growth, paying down debt, and reinvesting in businesses.

The next step for Herron is the nomination process, which he said would likely be in May.

And it’s not just former Tories who are concerned with the direction conservatism is taking in the province, and elsewhere on the continent. Dorothy Shephard, who resigned in June as social development minister in Higgs’s cabinet over the changes to Policy 713, said conservatism in North America is being "hijacked" and pushed toward the "far right."

"I’m worried about far−right politics, period. I think that those of us who care — and there are so many — really need to make sure that our voices don’t leave the party, and that we continue to own our party," she said in a recent interview.

Shephard suggested that it was a good thing that someone like Herron — with a Progressive Conservative pedigree — is seeking the nomination, even though he is running with the Liberals. "So never do I like to hear of losing someone to another colour, but at the same time I can respect the fact that someone could be trying to influence a path back to the centre."

Higgs last week dismissed the idea that the Progressive Conservative party was taking a rightward shift. The changes to the policy on gender identity in schools is about protecting the rights of parents, he said.

"I guess we maybe all have different interpretations of what ’to the right’ means," he said. "I mean, if having parents involved in raising their kids and making sure that’s an accepted practice, is to the right, and maybe we kind of have to evaluate society."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 25, 2024.

Hina Alam, The Canadian Press


 
 
NB Newsmaker Nov 29






Mounties awarded 8 per cent salary increase over 2 years

 

Mounties awarded 8 per cent salary increase over 2 years

Arbitration decision issued Tuesday grants 4 per cent increase for 2023 and 2024

Unionized RCMP officers are set to get a raise.

An arbitration decision this week awards an eight per cent increase over two years. The decision awards a four per cent increase retroactive to April 1, 2023, and another four per cent as of April 1 this year. 

The increase will affect about 20,000 RCMP members across the country from constable to staff sergeant major represented by the National Police Federation.

Martin Potvin, a spokesperson for the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, said in an email Friday that the government has great appreciation and respect for officers who make up the RCMP union.

"The RCMP operates in a policing environment where its members have skills easily transferrable to other police agencies," Potvin said. 

"To retain this skilled and in-demand workforce, RCMP compensation must remain competitive."

Potvin said that once approved by the Treasury Board, the new collective agreement will still need to be signed by both sides and implemented.

A spokesperson for the National Police Federation declined to comment Friday.

The Mounties first collective agreement signed in 2021, but retroactive to 2017, included wage increases of 23.7 per cent over six years.

The union celebrated that contract as bringing Mountie pay more in line with municipal police forces across the country. As of April 2022, a constable could earn up to $106,576.

 A table with various figuresThe rates for an RCMP constable under the first collective agreement signed in 2021. (Treasury Board Secretariat )

That contract expired March 31, 2023. 

Treasury Board of Canada website, which notes the sides were in arbitration, says negotiations began in January last year and that mediation had taken place earlier this year.

William Kaplan, chair of the arbitration board, wrote in the decision that the National Police Federation and Treasury Board of Canada had been able to resolve most issues.

The decision says "the bargaining relationship is positive and collaborative."

The increase was revealed by the commanding officer of the Codiac Regional RCMP at public meeting Thursday evening in Dieppe.  

Supt. Benoit Jolette said the increase was roughly in line with what had been expected. He said Codiac, which polices Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview, had budgeted for a 7.5 per cent increase.

The RCMP's first contract and its retroactive increases led to municipalities across the country worrying about the financial impact. 

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities lobbied the federal government to cover the cost, though Ottawa opted not to do so.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Shane Magee

Reporter

Shane Magee is a Moncton-based reporter for CBC.

 
 
 
6 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
Surprise Surprise Surprise  
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to David Amos  
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities lobbied the federal government to cover the cost, though Ottawa opted not to do so.  
 
 
 
 
Jonathan Richard
 
 
 
David Amos   

Reply to Jonathan Richard  
We the people in "bumble F nowhere" whom the RCMP purportedly serve and protect will never quit complaining of the nasty horsepeople who work for the King.
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman 
Another failure of the Higgs government. 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman   
How so???
 
 
G. Timothy Walton 
Reply to Kyle Woodman 
™ 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
???  
 
 
 
 
 
 

N.B. premier wrong to blame immigrants for housing crisis, advocates say

 

N.B. premier wrong to blame immigrants for housing crisis, advocates say

Profiteering, weak rental protections actually to blame, says Aditya Rao of Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre


New Brunswick premier says immigrants cause of housing crisis

Duration 1:06
After this week’s federal budget, Blaine Higgs made the comment to reporters, saying the country has to find a sustainable immigration level.

Housing and immigration advocates are angry New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs is blaming the housing crisis on immigrants and say his comments are dangerous.

"OK, what is the root cause of our housing crisis? You know, record — record immigration," Higgs said to reporters Tuesday evening while commenting on the federal budget.

"So what is this sustainable immigration level? How do we get to the point where we say, OK, this is what we can manage in our province, because everyone is feeling it," he went on to say.

Aditya Rao is a board member of the Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre, which provides services to migrant workers in New Brunswick facing poor working and housing conditions.

"This is a really dangerous road to go down," Rao said of HIggs's analysis. Racists and xenophobes would be waiting for words like this, he said.

A man is a blue shirt stands outside speaking to a camera. Aditya Rao, a board member of the Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre, says Higgs is wrong about the cause of the housing crisis. (Ed Hunter)

CBC News requested an interview with Higgs to better understand his comments but was instead sent an email statement attributed to the premier.

The statement suggested Higgs has his own definition of the word "immigrants."

He was referring to "the dramatic increase in New Brunswick's population," the statement said, and by immigrants, he meant all people coming to the province, including those from elsewhere in Canada.

"And to be clear: we are glad to see so many new people choosing to make New Brunswick their home," Higgs wrote, adding that the province has grown by 50,000 people in the last year.

There was no elaboration in the statement about what the premier meant when he suggested examining immigration levels.

Even with the effort to clarify, Higgs's comments appear to be in contrast with previous statements made by him and others in government.

In March, when the province's population hit 850,000, Higgs shared an image bearing his signature celebrating this milestone on a social media account.

"Our province is experiencing growth like never before. This is a key to our prosperity — more New Brunswickers contributing to our innovation, art, culture, and economy," Higgs wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

An image of people under the word 850,000 When New Brunswick's population hit 850,000 in March, Higgs shared this celebratory illustration bearing his signature on his X account. (Blaine Higgs/X)

"Let's give our new neighbours, families, and friends the warm New Brunswick welcome we are known for."

In a state of the province address in 2020, Higgs called for bringing 10,000 new immigrants to New Brunswick by 2027.

The Higgs government has touted recruiting international nurses and has spoken against a federal cap on international students.

Rao blames weak rental protections, profiteering 

Rao said the housing crisis is caused by weak provincial regulations on the rental market, "where landlords can increase rents as much as they want, profit as much as they want."

In addition, he said, for-profit corporations have too much ability to buy and resell homes and rental units for profit, while families are left unable to compete for a place to live.

Rao said immigrants are also victims of the housing crisis.

His organization hears of landlords refusing to rent to immigrants because of a lack of credit history in Canada and of migrant workers packed together in housing units while paying extremely high prices, he said.

"We're hearing stories that as soon as the landlord hears an accent on the phone, they're not interested in renting," Rao said.

"Landlords are profiting off the most vulnerable folks in our communities, and here we have a government that is turning around and blaming the folks that are victims of the housing crisis."

A small Canadian flag is held by someone sitting among a row of people.

Rao said that immigrants also face challenges in the tight housing market. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The New Brunswick Coalition for Tenants' Rights also spoke out about the premier's comments.

Spokesperson Nomaan X said he see this as "a very far-right talking point." 

"Anything that happens is always just put on the immigrants."

He said past discussions of bringing more immigrants to New Brunswick has always taken place with labour and financial benefits in mind. More foreign workers would help the economy, and more international students would bring more tuition to New Brunswick schools, he said.

"But when it comes to issues like housing, it's very easy to just throw the buck onto immigrants."

X said this can lead to "fear-mongering and spreading this bias against immigrants, and I think this a big problem."

He wants to see rent control brought to New Brunswick, adding that it is a change that could be made tomorrow if the government wanted to.

On that call with reporters, Higgs also mentioned that the province has a rent bank and a rental tribunal as examples of the help his government has given to renters.

The rent bank, launched in December, makes grants available to people facing eviction or financial crisis.

A view of houses in Saint John's Lower West Side Tenants New Brunswick have access to a rent bank and rental tribunal for complaints, but there is no cap on the amount that landlords can increase rent each year. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

But New Brunswick is one of only four provinces without a cap limiting how much landlords can raise rents each year.

The rental tribunal touted as an alternative has been plagued by delays.

Additionally, Higgs's comments about immigrants come as the New Brunswick Apartment Owners Association is predicting massive rent increases next year.

Appalling, opposition leaders say 

Liberal Leader Susan Holt said the premier's comments are dangerous. She said that immigrants have benefited the province. 

"I think that part of the housing crisis has come from the Higgs government's inability to get housing built," Holt said.

"So it doesn't show any leadership to demonize immigrants and blame the housing crisis on them."

Woman with shoulder-length light brown hair and man with white hair and glasses. Liberal Leader Susan Holt and Green Leader David Coon say the blame rests with Higgs's leadership, not newcomers to the province. (CBC)

Green Party Leader David Coon said that it seemed like rhetoric from the federal Conservative Party.

"It's extraordinary, because he's been slapping himself on the back every chance he gets to publicly congratulate himself for growing the New Brunswick population," Coon said.

"And now he turns around and blows a dog whistle in the direction of immigrants causing our problems. It's really appalling."

While Coon did acknowledge that population growth has come with challenges for the province, he said that is the fault of poor government planning, not newcomers themselves.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

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

  
 
 
66 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
Higgy reminds me of a big fish hanging on a wall. If he had kept his mouth shut he would never been caught
 
 
 
Sandra Boudreau     
Bringing in thousands of immigrants is reckless and without thought of consequences. We do not have the housing available. It causes more problems for Canadians looking for homes and for the immigrants. We do not have the health care available to Canadians, let alone thousands of newcomers. Our food banks and welfare systems are on the brink of disaster.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Sandra Boudreau
Perhaps you should that up with the Feds? 
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to David Amos 
"Take" 
 
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman
The provincial government has created an international immigration plan based on discussions with various stakeholders. They are the ones that set targets, and the targets is what they are getting. There's a difference between international immigration and interprovincial migration. Higgs is blaming international immigration for what is mostly an issue of interprovincial migration. In Canada, we have mobility rights. They can't prevent people from moving here from other provinces. He's conflating the whole issue because his base wants him to dog whistle what the federal conservatives are doing. The thing is, PP has not intention of limiting immigration, and neither does Higgs. They are being disingenuous. The solution is for Higgs to cut the rhetoric and spend some money in NB improving conditions and capacity for new comers. He has done none of that. He's basically blaming himself.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Which Woodman are you?  
 
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman
Higgs doesn't know whether he's coming or going, as usual.
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Welcome back to the circus
 
 
 
 
Jenn Smith 
Sorry, but we really do need to pause immigration, and not just because of the housing crisis, but the waiting list for doctors is also growing!! I’m sure there are some immigrants who already have a doctor or nurse practionner while I’ve been on the waiting list for 5 years now and many more NBers have been waiting even longer… .
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Jenn Smith
FYI My doctor is an immigrant. We laughed at the fact that he came from a town in Turkey that has the same name as where I live in NB
 
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman 
Blaine needs to get his Dog Whistle's straight. He should probably look at the Provinces' immigration strategy (which his government created) before he starts blowing his whistle. He likes to pat himself on the back every time we hit a new population milestone. .
 
 
David Amos   
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Go Figure