Showing posts with label bruce wark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bruce wark. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 December 2025

2 CCAC Technical Brief Rigs Question Answer - Town of Tantramar - Energy Project




More here from Bruce Wark on this issue:




"N.B. Power is trying to avoid an Energy and Utilities Board (EUB) review of its proposed 500-megawatt gas and diesel plant in Tantramar, even though the deal would leave ratepayers on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars.

That is why the Conservation Council is calling for a full public review of the project, because New Brunswickers deserve a say in our energy future. This deal will lock New Brunswickers into hundreds of millions of dollars in payments, fuel costs and other expenses — just like any other major capital project — and should not bypass any oversight.

Our director of climate research and policy, Dr. Moe Qureshi, argued just that when he appeared before the EUB this month, calling for a thorough review of the project"








Thursday, 2 October 2025

Rural Life Concerns at Howling Creek Farm [ Hess Family ] Report at Warktimes.com

 


Bruce Wark reports at this link:  As work begins on access road, neighbours worry about PROENERGY’s proposed gas/diesel plant on the Isthmus |

“I’m trying to run my business here and teach kids how to ride,” says Katie Hess who operates the 300-acre Howling Creek Farm just across the road from where machines are clearing the woods for the PROENERGY access road.

She says she worries about the dangers of giving riding lessons and working with horses with all the noise and disruptions.

Her farm has about five kilometres of trails and the barn can board and feed 18-20 horses.

In her online comment to the federal Impact Assessment Agency, Hess says she has extreme concerns about the proposed gas plant.

“When I hear of the amount of water to be used and its potential impact on the water table around us and that spent/treated water will be dumped in our ditches with high concentrations of iron and other materials that will potentially run right directly into our spring-fed well and local water table, it is very concerning, to say the least,” she writes.

Hess says her family has invested more than $1 million over the last 11 years in the farm and equestrian centre and she worries that a big, polluting gas plant would threaten the farm’s existence.

“And, I’m definitely not super thrilled to be raising my three-month-old next to a power plant,” she says."



Artwork above at the entrance to the Town Hall of Tantramar on Main Street


More reporting here from CBC's Erica Butler:

Tantramar council turns down call to oppose proposed natural gas power plant | CBC News

Thursday, 28 August 2025

Bruce Wark, Warktimes.com publishes in Tantramar with "News from the Margins"

 


Latest article here:

Elsipogtog comment contradicts assertions Indigenous First Nations & groups were consulted on Chignecto gas plant |


Some commentary on the article was as follows:


"Carol says:

Thank you Bruce Wark for keeping us so well informed about this proposed Chignecto Gas Plant project. Without you and your investigative journalism, Tantramar residents would truly be in the dark about what’s really going on behind the scenes. Our NB government, NB Power (and the American plant builder) do not seem to be operating in good faith."


"Jon says:

If there were cars that released cyanide or radiation, using them would not be “a choice for individuals to make” it would be a matter of public safety. The same is true of fossil fuels. Their use is so prevalent that they will have to be gradually phased out, not suddenly stopped, but they do have to stop being used eventually.

It’s a fact that fossil fuel carbon emissions are damaging the environment, health, and the economy. People shouldn’t be stigmatized for still relying on fossil fuels, they should be encouraged to make better choices, given incentives to change, and given practical options. But we will either change or suffer more and more wildfires, droughts, failed crops, coastal erosion, species extinction, failing fisheries, economic losses, larger storms, etc etc. No amount of “green cultist” slurs are going to change the reality that pumping fossil carbon into the air is disruptive, damaging, and causing global warming."


"Bill Steele says:

Crown’s duty to consult and the need for meaningful reconciliation efforts
Give me a break. They are NOT a stakeholder in any way at all in this project. Just trying to grab more power and more MONEY."


"S.A. Cunliffe says:

If you are 100% anti-fossils in general it seems to me that you would find every single development of this type of project to be in “bad faith” which is unfortunate because as Charles Langlois states at this comments section there are many of us in the silent majority who do not share your views and are pro-oil and gas and their development in Canada for the benefit of all.. we are often confused because we support people and their right to EV cars but don’t understand why they don’t see it as a choice for individuals to make.. I don’t even have a car, haven’t since 2016, but I see the value in owning and operating a vehicle running on gas and not “tied to the electric grid”. We never have a voice though.. we are maligned as “uninformed” in this university town of green cultists who go along to get along."


So what are the legal ramifications for the people in our region for calling themselves "unceded" and "settlers"?  Do you really have to be a genius to figure that out?


Ron Kelly Spurles long time trougher at the Town Hall and "Tourism Manager" among other things tells us his stance as "UNCEDED" with his sticker on his laptop... but why?  His wife is radical professor Patricia Kelly Spurles employed by Mount Allison University - she is a woman responsible for "race based hiring" [for the first time] at the University as part of the "Truth and Reconciliation" efforts on campus and in our town.


After considering the problems that "UNCEDED" is making for all New Brunswickers in 2025 is it wise to continue to advocate this position in Town Hall? Discuss.




[Local retired school teacher from Ontario who transplanted into Sackville N.B.] so was the "moderator" Carol Cooke acting responsibly when she made a point of making a land acknowledgement at the opening of this Forum in Beausejour.. why?



Shown below Carol Cooke "moderator" with MP Dominic Leblanc [long time Liberal Party of Canada representative of Beausejour]



Recommend following British Columbia's informed citizen Caroline Elliott... on Twitter...


At this link:  Caroline Elliott (@NVanCaroline) / X

Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Bruce Wark Warktimes.com on the Chiefs and Energy Project Gas Plant in Midgic "PROENERGY"


Read at this link:

Mi’gmaq chiefs say big gas plant can’t proceed without Indigenous-led impact assessment |


"The chiefs of the nine Mi’gmaq First Nations in New Brunswick say the proposed 500 MW gas plant on the Chignecto Isthmus can’t go ahead until it undergoes a rigorous, Mi’gmaq-led, rights impact assessment.

In a news release, the chiefs of Mi’gmawe’l Tplu’taqnn Inc. say that consent for the project can only be granted if “Mi’gmaq concerns are meaningfully addressed and impacts on rights are avoided, minimized, and accommodated.”

Mi’gmawe’l Tplu’taqnn Inc. (MTI) is the non-profit organization that represents Mi’gmaq communities in the province.

The chiefs say they acknowledge that New Brunswick has growing energy needs and they recognize the importance of integrating more renewable power on the grid. But they add that “critical issues” need to be dealt with before the PROENERGY gas/diesel plant can proceed.

“The proposed development is located in an area of cultural significance to the Mi’gmaq, where activities and land use extend well beyond community boundaries,” the news release notes.

“There are potential implications for Mi’gmaq harvesting, access to ancestral areas, and the health of local ecosystems. Concerns have also been raised about possible impacts to water quality, wetlands, and species that hold both ecological and cultural importance.”

‘Thorough’ review

The release adds that a “thorough, Migmaq-led review” will require the U.S. company “to address deficiencies, to complete all the necessary studies, and work with MTI to avoid, mitigate, and accommodate impacts to Mi’gmaq rights, culture and the environment.”

The chiefs also say that they haven’t made any decision on whether to invest in the project.

Slides displayed at two PROENERGY open houses last week claimed that the North Shore Mi’kmaq Tribal Council supported the project as a minority equity partner and that the gas plant would be co-owned by the Tribal Council and PROENERGY.

The company also makes those claims in a document it filed with the federal Impact Assessment Agency of Canada.

Land claims

Last summer, eight of the chiefs in the Mi’gmawe’l Tplu’taqnn organization went to court seeking a declaration of Aboriginal title to more than half of the land in New Brunswick including the 550 acres that PROENERGY would need for its gas plant.

In 2016, Elsipogtog First Nation filed its own claim for Aboriginal title to all of southeastern New Brunswick.

To read the chiefs’ news release, click here."

Some commentary at the article found here:

This is excellent news.




Photography by THE Indie Media Eastcoast of poster that once was displayed at the entry to the Sackville Post Office.



Additional commentary at Bruce Wark's blogger is found here:

Sunday, 17 August 2025

Top Level Grifting/Extortion is Going on in Canada By "Natives" & Their Enablers



Thanks Bruce Wark at warktimes.com for coverage on the natives and their economic partnerships that are being formed:


PROENERGY unable to back claims it has active Indigenous partners in 500 MW Centre Village gas plant |

commentary:

S.A. Cunliffe says:

Dear Bruce, Its not helpful watching you censor my commentary over the years.. I have been saddened to see your efforts to control the narrative in Tantramar. Bruce Pardy’s article here for discussions purposes:

https://financialpost.com/opinion/canadians-legal-rights-should-not-depend-indigenous-lineage


You have to stand in awe of the massive amount of money that is being moved here but its also completely "unsustainable".. and you also have to ask how much is ever going to be enough?

They [natives] need to get off the "tit"... 

#endracebasedlaw 

more here:

MBrant75 on X: "Ack! Indigenous services Canada crashed my iPad 140,000 entries $129+ billion https://t.co/WvPLdgfRnx https://t.co/YpuA2l1X0o" / X





No wonder we are told there is no desire to build and money to create a youth concrete skatepark project here since 2013... the money is just not flowing in that direction at all... such a pity.





Whoever is funding this signage is clearly insisting that the lands here don't belong to the non-natives.


Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Bruce Wark on Indiginization in Canada and Mount Allison University's Role

 

Bruce Wark and his efforts to report in the region since 2016 at warktimes.com are duly noted.


"As Robert Campbell mentions in the piece, Mount A was responding in part to recommendations for universities in the 2015 final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

[ this is the link to the 17 March 2016 source at "Boardwalk Radio" Mount Allison University introduced by Laura Landon, Bruce Wark's wife and Librarian at the University is mentioned above:  Mt. A. promises indigenization by Bruce Wark ] 

Here’s a summary of those recommendations:

The TRC emphasizes that universities have a vital role to play in:

• Promoting equitable access to post-secondary education for Indigenous students

• Supporting Indigenous language revitalization

• Educating future professionals (doctors, lawyers, teachers) about Indigenous history, cultures, and legal traditions

• Integrating Indigenous knowledge systems into curricula and research

• Participating in national reconciliation research efforts

Many Canadian universities have since responded by creating Indigenous-focused academic programs, mandatory Indigenous studies courses, language initiatives, land acknowledgements, and support services for Indigenous students.

When I went to elementary, secondary and vocational schools including teachers’ college, I learned almost nothing about Canada’s native peoples. Yes, we studied a couple of E. Pauline Johnson’s poems such as “The Song My Paddle Sings” and “As Red Men Die”, but not much else. I remember also learning about John A’s conflicts with the native people’s in the west and the hanging of Louis Riel, but what I learned was mainly from John A’s point of view. He was presented as a great nation builder who had to overcome terrible odds in building the railway and settling the west. Residential schools were not mentioned and I didn’t know anything about them until the 1990s.

When I read the 2021 book, “The Company: The Rise and Fall of the Hudson’s Bay Empire” by Stephen R. Bown, I was surprised at how much of that history depended on the company’s relationship with the Indigenous peoples who provided furs. Many Hudson’s Bay Company employees married native women and stayed here instead of returning home to England. It’s a rich, cross-cultural history that our schools should be teaching. "

Bruce Wark, Warktimes.com emailed message received by contributor to add more insights..


Thanks for your thoughts on this Bruce.  Much appreciated.


Mount Allison University "Owens Art Gallery" flying a uniquely native flag...


Meanwhile this week in Quebec...this report:

The Kanien'kehá:ka say 97km² of Montreal’s South Shore is theirs. They want their claim settled

Friday, 30 May 2025

"Do I Look Indigenous to You" ?

"Indigenization"... with Laura Landon, Mount Allison University campus librarian with her husband Bruce Wark [warktimes.com ] - listen on soundcloud here: 

 Mt. A. promises indigenization by Bruce Wark


Community, identity, security, peace, prosperity, leadership, women, racism, elders, division, academia, indigenous studies, non-indigenous folks, tribalism, and what constitutes a leader?

What is "race based law"? 

All these questions and more in 2025 as we see an agenda at play to divide society down the lines of "natives" and "non-natives"that was incubated into our Canadian universities by "change agents" and "educated" folks"... please read more here:



New indigenous affairs co-ordinator | Mount Allison

"Doreen Richard (’96) joins campus community as first indigenous affairs co-ordinator

Doreen Richard (’96) joined the campus community this past summer as the University’s first indigenous affairs co-ordinator. Richard’s position is meant to help all students on campus, assisting with campus events, residence requirements, and academic research in the area of First Nations, as well as helping admissions recruit First Nations students.

“One of my goals is to build relationships with key players to assist in the indigenization of our campus — academically, socially, and culturally,” says Richard. “I am working with faculty and staff to help create an environment where First Nations students see themselves positively in the curriculum and working closely with the Indigenous Support Group.”

Originally from Nova Scotia, Richard is Mi’kmaq and taught in the public school system throughout the Maritimes."

More here:

Women’s Leadership Series encourages compassionate leaders - The Argosy



These are great lands where we all want to live together in peace.  How can there be peaceful coexistence in 2025?

#EndRaceBasedLaw


More here on a symposium with "Local News Matters" 2025 and Laura Landon, Erica Butler CHMA reporter, and others next month on Mount Allison University campus:   Local News Matters


Finally, I'm afraid New Brunswickers are being kept in the dark on these land claims and 'land back' movements and 'unceded territory' declarations by the politicians .. these are not small issues of the day.  Take a look at this news of non-indigenous people being banned from parks as reported by Caroline Elliott who lives in North Vancouver, British Columbia:

Caroline Elliott on X: "🚨MORE park & public land access denied to non-Indigenous British Columbians🚨 An Indian Band has unilaterally & indefinitely barred the public from a large area of public land, including access to Blue Earth Provincial Park. Silence from the BC govt… https://t.co/7RBYq94GFI https://t.co/EOoNe9EBBT" / X



More here with Caroline Elliott on Twitter:

Caroline Elliott on X: "You might be wondering, what’s with all the fuss around the closure of Joffre Lakes Provincial Park to non-Indigenous British Columbians? Here’s why it matters. A lot.  #bcpoli https://t.co/JWXbGMZmdP" / X

Reported story at Daily Mail Online here:

Canada blocking millions from parks over 'apartheid' scheme for the indigenous to 'reconnect' with land | Daily Mail Online




Wednesday, 30 April 2025

Bruce Wark Reports on NB Housing & Minister David Hickey's Visit to Tantramar "Town Hall Session in 2025"

 King John III the rightful King of England Joseph Gregory Hallett sent these to this blogger in 2023.

He has a Youtube Channel here: King of UK - YouTube

His website has been under attack at "kingjohnthethird.uk" for the past year.  Ebooks not available here:

Joseph Gregory Hallett King John III - All 13 books


At this link at Warktimes.com:

NB Housing Minister David Hickey says gov’t trying to balance tenants’ rights with concerns of developers & landlords |

Some commentary on the article here:


"Wayne Feindel says:

Thomas Sowell an American economist identified a Paradox in the flow of money. There seemed to always lots of money for more bureaucrats, but never enough to provide the Doctors and nurses and other staff to actually make a difference. Education is also an example of this paradox .Anglephone East District Education council minutes 2015 , show that 25 more office stvaff was hired to supposedly direct resources to teachers. The same year teachers were being layed off.
Tantranar Town office staff exploion on day one was identified in 1996 as the unintended consequences of amalgation and why it was bad.. Each councilor with no file or reponsibility brings home more cash than the whole former Council of Dorchester including the Mayor until January 1 2023. Offices look very busy but very little actually marches any where then on paper.
It is the story of N B. Victory for the Liberals pandering to the stupidity pandemic,but the cost was easily a million. The Education department didn’t protect the students while Iwas on the board and spent $148 000 to make sure that parents the first educators were blocked from Ombudsperson.
A Depression is coming so WE need serious down and out debate onHousing . How many rooms in your home are you willing to set aside for the homeless. During the Second World War there three families in my former residence Arrived in Dorchester 1966 as part of recruitment to meet the baby boom. Three teachers and a family of four in one house. Tantramar and Canada are broke or worse. Defund the Town office and departments now.. Citizens in wards need to pressure the Council to demand a file and reponsible participation. That will sent a message that there is no way we have to listen about the death of Demoracy in USA because Trump a symptom of dumping citizens for the elite .
Boot ” policy goverance” out and return your Council to the front bench.
I know! The guy that came up with this new system is a clinical psychologist but in a creises it doesn’t work and runs communities into the ground and worse defunds key services and breaks the Town. Thirty year’s of knowing this in New Brunswick is crazy to continue with a vad strategy.."



"S.A. Cunliffe says:

I enjoyed watching the consensus building session and sampling snacks… it was worth my time to take in the shenanigans and connect with others around here in real life.
As I was unable to address the crowd when I approached the microphone in my “Advocate” cap and stood next to Andrew Black, I can only tell you this much – his attempt to control the narrative by not allowing me to speak to his crowd and manage the narrative at a so-called information seeking public session is weak behaviour. CAO Jennifer Borne was gracious and went to bring me a glass of water when I arrived with my big #BringBackBeauty signage. As a long time resident who does have a “stakeholder” interest here I am always baffled that Julia Feltham pops up to make sure we all know she is on the job in her capacity as “facilitator” – in this case a two day session – but do we know how she is compensated for her time and energy? By the town? By an outside agency? Who? As well.. is it possible that the man who spoke out about his inability to get an apartment project built here [RBDobsonHomes] is indicative of a more common complaint indicating a culture of interference with private property owners and their developments? Discuss amongst yourselves. What about a little transparency Andrew Black — whatever you all were up to on Day 1 when various “stakeholders” gathered behind closed doors, their discussions must have been worth listening to…too bad we were not invited in."


"Elaine MacDonald says:

Wayne – ” From B C. to Nova Scotia, Tantramar now exhibits literally overnight too many petty regulations (height of grass) and ballooning taxes just to feed the bureaucracy ( propagandist) in town hall. ”

Kind’a reminds me of HOA’s in the States. Maybe that’s what Tantramar is now, just one big HOA?"