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Northern N.B. town declares French as sole official language after review

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Northern N.B. town declares French as sole official language after review

Belle-Baie says it plans to also communicate health and safety information in English

Belle-Baie, a newly formed town, launched a review into its language policy after concerns were raised over public notices published only in French.

The majority-francophone community was created on Jan. 1, when Beresford, Petit-Rocher, Nigadoo and Pointe-Verte were merged as part of local governance reform.

On Thursday, the town released a draft of its language policy to the public. It declares French as the official language of Belle-Baie, but notes it will make exceptions for public notices for health and safety issues.

Mayor Daniel Guitard said any resident will still be able to request all services in English.

"We wanted to have the best possible policy showing that we're a French community. But we wanted to be reasonable with our anglophone friends," he said. 

        "We're not a bilingual community, we're a French community. But we will provide services to citizens in English if they require it to be in English, in certain circumstances.

- Mayor Daniel Guitard

The draft policy states that all oral and written communications from the municipality, including public notices, information documents, social media posts and the town's website will be solely in French. It also says the working language of government will be French. Public notices will be bilingual when it concerns health or public safety.

Belle-Baie's residents are 92 per cent francophone, so the town has no obligation to provide bilingual services.

Under New Brunswick's Official Languages Act, only a municipality whose official language minority population reaches at least 20 per cent is required to offer services in both English and French. Cities are also required to provide bilingual services.

'Very unwelcoming'

Before the creation of Belle-Baie, the former Town of Beresford published public notices in both official languages as a courtesy to English-speaking residents. In the 2021 census, 17.5 per cent of Beresford residents reported English as their first language, putting it just short of the 20 per cent threshold. Out of the 650 anglophones, 305 reported knowledge of English only.

Ashley Aube, an anglophone resident of Beresford for 15 years, said people first started raising concerns about French-only notices after a boil-water advisory was posted only in French. She said the warning was for an area adjacent to a daycare for anglophone children.

"It was always in French and English, even the town sign was in French and English," she said of services before the merger. "I don't know why when we became Belle-Baie that all of a sudden it had to become a French community."

A portrait photo of a woman. Ashley Aube says she's concerned anglophone residents of Belle-Baie could miss important notices from the municipality. (Zoom/CBC)

Aube, who grew up in Ontario, said she speaks basic French but does not consider herself to be fully bilingual. She's concerned unilingual anglophones will be left out of cultural, recreational and community activities.

"Just assuming that they would understand French, to me, is very unwelcoming," she said.

In February, New Brunswick's Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages confirmed it had received complaints about the language policy in Belle-Baie.

Aube said she understands the desire to protect the French language, but said excluding an entire group of citizens from public notices is not the right approach.

Policy promotes French, mayor says

Guitard said Belle-Baie's transition committee, which was created to work on the amalgamation, decided the new municipality would operate in French given its linguistic composition. 

He said after launching a review of the policy, a committee of councillors consulted with experts, politicians and the province's Commissioner of Official Languages.

The municipality is currently serving residents in both official languages at its office and is personally communicating with individual residents in English when requested. Public notices and Facebook posts have only been made in French.

Guitard said anglophone residents will also be able to make presentations before council or ask questions in English. He said places like Belle-Baie are important for the francophone and Acadian linguistic minority community in New Brunswick.

He said his town accepts anglophones with "open arms" and will strive to offer quality services in English when requested. He said the "vast majority" of citizens he consulted with told him it was important to protect the French nature of the community.

"We had to come up with rules to make sure we serve our population, but we promote the French side of our community," he said.

"We're not a bilingual community, we're a French community. But we will provide services to citizens in English if they require it to be in English, in certain circumstances."

Belle-Baie will hear feedback on the draft policy at a public meeting on Tuesday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


 
Alexandre Silberman

Video journalist

Alexandre Silberman is a video journalist with CBC News based in Moncton. He has previously worked at CBC Fredericton, Power & Politics, and Marketplace. You can reach him by email at: alexandre.silberman@cbc.ca

 
 
 
168 Comments 



David Amos
What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander 
 
 
Wendy Simon
Reply to David Amos
 
 
 
David Amos
Content Deactivated 
Methinks Mayor Daniel Guitard swore an oath to our British King to uphold the Charter N'esy Pas? 
 
 
 
 
Janice small  
I'm fluent in French and English and I am shocked and just not sure if this is a publicity stunt to get the mayor and his " newly formed town " some media coverage or just a really unfortunate knee jerk decision by Belle-Baie and council.Tourist season is upon us and do you really thing an English family will stop in Belle-Baie for lunch or book a motel or a B & B. With media coverage like this you sure are not making English tourist welcome.

If I were a small business in Belle-Baie trying to make ends meet and survive in today's world I would be very very upset with my " newly formed town "

Now just imagine if a town or city in NB with a large percentage of english voted to go English as the solo language.The Acadian Society of NB would be all over this as unfair, unjust, against my rights ,,,,on and on it goes..

The optics look terrible here so take a step back admit the mistake and chalk it up to being a " newly formed town " and welcome the english speaking people to your beautiful area instead of fueling the divide and keeping english out of your area..

 
David Amos 
Reply to Janice small 
Where is HON. DANIEL ALLAIN when we need him??? 
 
 
 
 
Graeme Scott  
What a crazy set of rules. A French town or village can unilaterally declare itself French only but an English city like Saint John must be bilingual. Did the SANB dictate the rules to government when the were written?
 
 
David Amos 
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Graeme Scott 
Everybody knows SANB loves to dictate the rules when it suits their agenda 
 
 
jtallain1029 
Reply to Graeme Scott  
If we weren't a bilingual province, it would definitely be different...Edmundston, Saint John, Fredericton, Moncton, Dieppe, Miramichi, Bathurst and Campbellton MUST be bilingual. Tide Head, Atholville, Dalhousie, Eer River Crossing, Charlo, Richibucto, Rexton and Shediac MUST be bilingual. Any other place with a minority language at 20% or more MUST be bilingual. 
 
 
 
 
Chris Merriam  
"But we wanted to be reasonable with our anglophone friends"...nothing says friendship like division and exclusion.  
 
 
Matt Titanium 
Reply to Chris Merriam
Yup lol  
 
 
David Amos 
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Chris Merriam 
I doubt the Mayor has any anglophone friends 
 
 
 
 
Marc Bourque  
It’s all about fairness. Daniel had no problem taking my money when he use to sell ATV’s I have zero respect for that man now. My first language is French Although iam French iam also fighting for the English speaking population for their rights also.Can’t say how many would do the same for me! It’s all about fairness and equality. Daniel is a liberal, you know those who wants everyone to be treated equally. LOL LOL Daniel you’ve done burnt your bridge!! 
 
 
Dan Armitage 
Reply to Marc Bourque  
Well said Marc and as we should fight for yours as well!
 
 
David Amos 
Content Deactivated 
Reply to Marc Bourque  
When did he sell ATVs?
 
 
Marc Bourque  
Reply to Dan Armitage  
Thank you 😊
 
 
 
 
pat rice 
New Brunswick was very very reluctant and the last province to allow the teaching of French in 1977. Only after Ottawa forced them to, ahead of the 1980 referendum, so they could pretend Canadians love French, even though they did everything to erase it from their territory since they arrived from Europe. New Brunswick claim as the only bilingual province is a cloud of smoke, an illusion. A lie. I don’t know a single person born in an English household that can hold a conversation in French. That would be zero.
 
 
Toby Tolly  
Reply to pat rice   
1977

before that no french was taught?

lmao

 
David Amos  
Reply to pat rice
I studied French in New Brunswick in the sixties



 

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