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N.B. tourism minister defends pricey trip to United Kingdom, France

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N.B. tourism minister defends pricey trip to United Kingdom, France

Tammy Scott-Wallace says New Brunswick can learn ‘best practices’ from Windsor Castle, Palace of Versailles

New Brunswick's tourism minister is defending a trip she and her top officials took to the United Kingdom and France that helped her deputy minister rack up a $77,000 travel bill last year.

Tammy Scott-Wallace said the trip last September included meetings with a number of tour operators and public relations firms in London and Paris that have contracts to market the province to potential visitors from the two countries.

"That's incredibly important. It's a good day's work and it's a good seven days' work for me, I'll tell you that," Scott-Wallace said.

Her deputy, Yennah Hurley, sat next to her as she spent more than an hour responding to questions about the trip from Liberal MLA and tourism critic Isabelle Thériault during a meeting of the legislature committee studying budget estimates. 

As first reported by CBC News, Hurley's expenses for the trip totalled $12,328, part of the $77,710 overall she claimed last year.

A woman with long black hair looking slightly off to the side Liberal MLA and tourism critic Isabelle Thériault questioned Scott-Wallace about why the trip was necessary. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Scott-Wallace's trip cost $10,199.

"What did it give the taxpayers of New Brunswick, that you went there for eight days?" Thériault asked.

"It's really not clear what you did, except visit some places. Like, you have to face the music."

Two other officials from the Department of Tourism, Heritage and Culture also made the trip.

Scott-Wallace acknowledged that no travel conferences or tourism trade shows were part of her schedule.

But she said it was important to meet with the tour operators and public relations firms hired to represent the province in the U.K. and France to rebuild connections frayed during COVID-19 travel restrictions.

"These are key markets for our province," she said.

Departmental staff then "built an itinerary," Scott-Wallace said, that included visits to Windsor Castle, Stonehenge, the British Museum, the London Eye and the Palace of Versailles — all of them expensed to taxpayers.

WATCH | 'You have to face the music,' Liberal tourism critic says:
 

N.B. tourism minister defends pricey European trip

Duration 1:07
‘That’s a good day's work,’ says Tammy Scott-Wallace, as she takes questions during a legislative committee session on her spending overseas.

The visits by her officials to the Palace of Versailles and Windsor Palace — which she pointed out she did not visit herself — provided insights into managing "built heritage," the minister said.

The visits by her officials to the Palace of Versailles and Windsor Palace — which she pointed out she did not visit herself — provided insights into managing "built heritage," the minister said.

New Brunswick has "similar sites, but on a smaller scale, absolutely," Scott-Wallace argued.

"There are best practices all over the country, all over the world, and when we are there having meetings with stakeholders, it's important we learn those best practices while we're there." 

She also said 45-minute tours offered at the British Museum in London could be a model for an abbreviated tour of the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John offered to cruise ship visitors.

She called the London facility "truly a new, modern-age museum, and I think the people of New Brunswick deserve to have a modern, state-of-the-art museum." 

No one from the New Brunswick Museum was part of the London visit but it was set up at the suggestion of the Saint John museum's staff, Scott-Wallace said.

The front of the British Museum Scott-Wallace said tours at the British Museum in London could be a model for the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John. (British Museum/Facebook)

Thériault told CBC News she wasn't satisfied with Scott-Wallace's responses.

"I didn't get clear answers," she said.

Scott-Wallace said New Brunswick recorded 122,600 "visit nights" from French tourists in 2023, worth $11.6 million in revenue, and 121,000 from U.K. visitors, worth $18.2 million.

Trips to the province from the U.K. were up 23 per cent last year, compared to 2022, while trips from France were up 12 per cent. 

Asked if Premier Blaine Higgs or someone else approved the trip in advance, Scott-Wallace said such trips are normal for the department.

"It is budgeted for. It is part of the work that we do," she said.

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.

 
 
108 Comments 
 
 
David Amos
I doubt that I will ever forget this

"Tammy Scott-Wallace says New Brunswick can learn ‘best practices’ from Windsor Castle, Palace of Versailles"

 
David Amos 
Reply to David Amos
I will never forget the first question Higgys Minister asked me on the phone when she was the editor of the Kings County Record in 2015. Trust that I hung up and answered her in writing 
 

 

Graham McCormack
She stumbled and stuttered her answers without saying anything.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply toGraham McCormack
Par for the course
 
 
 
 
Al Clark   
I hope she mentioned Green Gables (one province over) 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply toAl Clark  
Thats not in her mandate 
 
 
 
 
Al Clark   
The wife and her bff went on a junket to paris for about 5% of this trip. No GNB gold card though....... 
 
  
Joe Zilch  
Reply toAl Clark  
Our GG went to Iceland for 4 days and spent $71,000 on a rental limo. They don't care about our money.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply toAl Clark  
My wife and I went to Paris for free when she worked for American Express but we had to pay for the rental car to go visit my Uncle Raymond's Grave in Normandy  
 
 
MR Cain 
Reply toJoe Zilch 
That was a couple years ago; nobody seems to care.  
 
 
Steph Roche 
Reply toJoe Zilch  
oh Joe

are you suggesting that we deprive our GG of the opportunity to live in the tradition of her people?

 
 
 
Al Clark  
Pretty cool how many millions in french tourism the cons can attract with one $22,000 hush hush trip. How do you suppose the francophonie the cons keep raving about might have done. Ha ha ha. 
 
 
David Amos 
Content Deactivated
Reply toAl Clark  
Its time for your nap
 
 
 
Douglas Ma
Content Deactivated
Thats a bargain PMJT would have been ten times that 


David Amos 
Reply to Douglas Ma
Many a true word is said in jest  
 
 
 
 
Douglas James  
One thing I find quite telling in comments on this story is the lack of all those Conservative posters who jump on every single misstep made by Trudeau, including his vacation trips. 
 
 
Lynette Browne 
Reply to Douglas James
Their main goal is to discredit the gov't.
 
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Lynette Browne 
As Liberals do with Conservatives. It's called politics folks so its nothing new.   
 
 
Dennis Woodman 
Reply to Lynette Browne  
It’s not hard to discredit the government. No JT has he will still give Saskatchewan households a CT rebate, even though all CT is being withheld, on top of the carve out of oil heat  
 
 
MR Cain 
Reply to Dennis Woodman  
The CRA will claw back the money owed; or maybe hold back some transfer payments. JT has our back.   
 
 
Joe Zilch  
Reply to Lynette Browne
The PMJT government discredits itself! 


David Amos 
Reply to Lynette Browne 
Surely you jest 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Lynette Browne 
What is your goal? 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
Amen


Lynette Browne 
Reply to David Amos
Not at all. 
 
 
Lynette Browne 
Reply to David Amos
For what?  
 
 
David Amos 
Content Deactivated
Reply to Lynette Browne 
I bet you laughed at me earlier when my replies to you went "Poof"
 
 
MR Cain  
Reply toJoe Zilch 
Did nobody explain about the heat pumps and the pause? You get something.  
 
 
Joe Zilch  
Reply to MR Cain  
Can't afford to get heat pumps. way too expensive. Plus here in NS they put a carbon tax on our electric bill. So it costs more to run the heat pump.
 
 
MR Cain  
Reply toJoe Zilch 
Obviously, nobody explained the deal. Coal is still being used as fuel for your electricity. You have to apply to get other rebates and subsidies for not only the pump but building upgrades. 
 
 
Joe Zilch  
Reply to MR Cain  
That is right and for me to get the subsidies I would have to put a heat pump on each floor of my home, so 3 heat pumps. plus rip out the old heating system, and install a new electrical service. In total I would be out of pocket about $25000. No way I can do it.

This program is only good if you are rich.

And yes we have 60% coal powered electrical grid but the carbo tax on the elec bill only makes heat pumps less attractive as there are fewer savings.

 
MR Cain  
Reply toJoe Zilch   
No ide about your personal situation, but I do know that you need to check the program out; you are missing too many pieces.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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