https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies
David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos@Kathryn98967631 and 49 others
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/02/a-decade-after-calling-for-extensive.html
#nbpoli#cdnpoli
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/finn-report-amalgamation-local-government-1.5029473
Les Cooper
Les Cooper
david robertson
maude windsor
My heart goes out to all municipal politicians if they are ethical because they live among us where the rubber meets the road if you are lucky enough to dodge the potholes. However everybody knows that certain municipal politicians definitely I do not trust as far as I could throw them and have said so openly for many years particularly while running for public office myself. This domain is just one example of my stating my opinions openly yet in return I only hear crickets or insults from my political opponents N'esy Pas?
Mike Decoste
Robert Brannen
Laurie Clark
True but after running for public office in the area for the past 15 years all I have ever heard from the electorate is the crickets in their backyards as they followed the Pied Pipers waving red, orange, green, blue and and now purple banners to the polling stations.
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
maude windsor
Asked me what I was gonna do about getting rid of all the people from Quebec who worked for the government or whatever and as soon as I responded her comment went POOF
Charles Dunton
Rosco holt
Gary MacKay
Norman Albert Snr
Emery Hyslop-Margison
Fred Brewer
Matt Steele
Content disabled.
pete prosser
pete prosser
David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos@Kathryn98967631 and 49 others
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/02/a-decade-after-calling-for-extensive.html
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/finn-report-amalgamation-local-government-1.5029473
A decade after calling for extensive amalgamations, Finn report author sees few changes
Comments
Les Cooper
Alot of rural areas go to cities and use their facilities. I can see why they would want to almagumat.
Les Cooper
The Atlantic Provinces should be alalgmated!
Les Cooper
@Les Cooper Combine all 3 and get rid of all the politions that are bleeding the little provinces dry.
And we could have a bigger say in
Canada. The 3 provinces are to small to stay afloat.
And we could have a bigger say in
Canada. The 3 provinces are to small to stay afloat.
david robertson
Worst thing you can hear ! I'm from the gov't and I am here to help you!
maude windsor
local governance should be developed at the political level closest to the people they are representing. schoolboards should collect taxes locally and spend $$$ on local schools (this is important because if parents want academically superior schools they will pay for it....no school taxes should be sent to fredericton! as for french factor the federal government under BNAct must pay 100% costs of building and operating the private schools called 'francophone' that only allow french speaking student s of french speaking parents...today, in any school district where parents are concerned their public schools prepare students for university or jobs there must be bilingual schools that represent countries NB will be trading with..like arabic, mandarin, gaelic,ukranian,etc.-----large municipal clusters are liked by politicians because there are so many more local politicians voted in...--it is time also that the training area of DND in gagetown must be returned to the families thrown off these lands..the base training is costing too much for Trudeau's military.........................
David Amos
@maude windsor Methinks unless you are homeless like I was for 14 years then you live within a municipality of some sort. Everybody knows all taxes are sourced from us be it income tax, property tax, sales tax, gas tax, vehicle registration, speeding tickets fines etc etc etc. Most of the money goes to Ottawa or Fredericton. The municipal politicians then have to beg for scraps while we pay NB Power a horrendous rate just to keep the street lights on.
@maude windsor Methinks unless you are homeless like I was for 14 years then you live within a municipality of some sort. Everybody knows all taxes are sourced from us be it income tax, property tax, sales tax, gas tax, vehicle registration, speeding tickets fines etc etc etc. Most of the money goes to Ottawa or Fredericton. The municipal politicians then have to beg for scraps while we pay NB Power a horrendous rate just to keep the street lights on.
My heart goes out to all municipal politicians if they are ethical because they live among us where the rubber meets the road if you are lucky enough to dodge the potholes. However everybody knows that certain municipal politicians definitely I do not trust as far as I could throw them and have said so openly for many years particularly while running for public office myself. This domain is just one example of my stating my opinions openly yet in return I only hear crickets or insults from my political opponents N'esy Pas?
Mike Decoste
Amalgamation means politicians might lose power. Is it really necessary to have 3 mayors and 25 councillors paid by taxpayers to run the Moncton are area? And why does NB need more civil servants per population than any province in Canada? Perhaps this is why the taxes are so high in NB.
David Amos
@Mike Decoste How about Sussex and Sussex Corner being separate? Methinks that is a dumb one too N'esy Pas?
Robert Brannen
But for the acquiescence of King George III to a pressure by UEL refugees for a colony of their own, due to a dislike for governance of Nova Scotia from Halifax, Canada would have nine viable provinces today.
David Amos
@Robert Brannen YUP But Methinks the Crown forgot to write us a constitution in 1784 and have never bothered to since That is why the Feds have to edit their Charter now and then like when New Brunswick wanted a Language Commissioner etc N'esy Pas?
Laurie Clark
If someone wants something done in NB, they should know by now that you have to talk to the Irvings! They have been running this province for far too long and it doesn't matter what the name of the party in "power" is!
David Amos
@Laurie Clark Oh So True However methinks Mr Higgs must know that my Father made the Irving Clan pay their fair share of property taxes when he was alive and Mayor Don Darling was in kindergarten in Fredericton N'esy Pas?
Methinks unless you are homeless like I was for 14 years then you live within a municipality of some sort. Everybody knows all taxes are sourced from us be it income tax, property tax, sales tax, gas tax, vehicle registration, speeding tickets fines etc etc etc. Most of the money goes to Ottawa or Fredericton. The municipal politicians then have to beg for scraps while we pay NB Power a horrendous rate just to keep the street lights on.
My heart goes out to all municipal politicians if they are ethical because they live among us where the rubber meets the road if you are lucky enough to dodge the potholes. However everybody knows that certain municipal politicians definitely I do not trust as far as I could throw them and have said so openly for many years particularly while running for public office myself. This domain is just one example of my stating my opinions openly yet in return I only hear crickets or insults from my political opponents N'esy Pas?
Emery Hyslop-Margison
@Laurie Clark There is much truth in your comment - sort of public knowledge in New Brunswick isn't it? I've been concerned with some of Premier HIggs issues of focus given their obvious connection to Irving interests. However, I think he's done a reasonable job so far overall and should be given a chance to make the tough decisions the province requires to get back on the rails after decades of mismanagement. I figure he's got another 18 months to demonstrate he can achieve this objective. Otherwise, we elect one of the emerging parties.
maude windsor
@Emery Hyslop-Margison ask scott brison and justin trudeau about the Irving's lobbying!!! poor vice admiral norman lost his life work of distinguished service by not giving the ship contract to the Irvings.....
NB&Alberta should form a liason as 80%of albertans are NBers....
this would serve NB economic development.........
NB&Alberta should form a liason as 80%of albertans are NBers....
this would serve NB economic development.........
David Amos
@maude windsor Methinks you have better luck asking me what I know about that malicious nonsense. Anyone can Google "David Amos Mark Norman" N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@maude windsor "ask scott brison and justin trudeau about the Irving's lobbying!!! poor vice admiral norman lost his life work of distinguished service by not giving the ship contract to the Irvings"
Methinks that you have a bad habit of evaporating N'esy Pas?
Methinks that you have a bad habit of evaporating N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@maude windsor "local governance should be developed at the political level closest to the people they are representing. schoolboards should collect taxes locally and spend $$$ on local schools (this is important because if parents want academically superior schools they will pay for it....no school taxes should be sent to fredericton!"
Methinks unless you are homeless like I was for 14 years then you live within a municipality of some sort. Everybody knows all taxes are sourced from us be it income tax, property tax, sales tax, gas tax, vehicle registration, speeding tickets fines etc etc etc. Most of the money goes to Ottawa or Fredericton. The municipal politicians then have to beg for scraps while we pay NB Power a horrendous rate just to keep the street lights on.
My heart goes out to all municipal politicians if they are ethical because they live among us where the rubber meets the road if you are lucky enough to dodge the potholes. However everybody knows that certain municipal politicians definitely I do not trust as far as I could throw them and have said so openly for many years particularly while running for public office myself. This domain is just one example of my stating my opinions openly yet in return I only hear crickets or insults from my political opponents N'esy Pas?
Paul Bourgoin
It would appear that what could benefit tax paying New Brunswicker's does not seem to fit in the long term vision designing plan, or even address this matter. At the end of the day New Brunswick is a have not province with no surplus cash and many secret sweet heart deals that also need to be addressed
David Amos
@Paul Bourgoin "At the end of the day New Brunswick is a have not province with no surplus cash and many secret sweet heart deals that also need to be addressed"
True but after running for public office in the area for the past 15 years all I have ever heard from the electorate is the crickets in their backyards as they followed the Pied Pipers waving red, orange, green, blue and and now purple banners to the polling stations.
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
@Paul Bourgoin "At the end of the day New Brunswick is a have not province with no surplus cash and many secret sweet heart deals that also need to be addressed"
True but after running for public office in the area for the past 15 years all I have ever heard from the electorate is the crickets in their backyards as they followed the Pied Pipers waving red, orange, green, blue and and now purple banners to the polling stations.
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
True but after running for public office in the area for the past 15 years all I have ever heard from the electorate is the crickets in their backyards as they followed the Pied Pipers waving red, orange, green, blue and and now purple banners to the polling stations.
Methinks I have every right to say that the folks get the governments they deserve when apathy rules the day N'esy Pas?
maude windsor
Asked me what I was gonna do about getting rid of all the people from Quebec who worked for the government or whatever and as soon as I responded her comment went POOF
David Amos
@maude windsor Why not take up your beef with SANB I bet legions of Acadians must be sick and tired of all the greedy Quebecois getting the great bureaucratic jobs in New Brunswick N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@David Amos @maude windsor Hmmm Where did your question to me go?
Paul Bourgoin
@David Amos
The New Brunswick Political ruling authority is more powerful then all the people of this province. Say that all of the NB Voters were to vote for the same Party the now NB governing authority would still control New Brunswick!
The New Brunswick Political ruling authority is more powerful then all the people of this province. Say that all of the NB Voters were to vote for the same Party the now NB governing authority would still control New Brunswick!
David Amos
@Paul Bourgoin Speak for your self Trust that the Irving Clan has no say over me and I am a citizen of this province just like they are
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Paul Bourgoin BTW we should be more concerned about our right free speech and who made maude windsor's comment come and go Correct?
David Amos
Methinks Norma McGraw should try thinking outside of the box and give me a call sometime N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@David Amos Hmmm well we just talked and the lady didn't seem to care Surprise Surprise Surprise
Charles Dunton
In my area, potential rural governments split my community into two parts. When asked organizers said vote for the new government and then we'll force amalgamation of the rest of your community.
How can that be responsible government?
How can that be responsible government?
David Amos
@Charles Dunton It isn't
Rosco holt
Finn's report was flawed for the beginning. There's no benefit for rural communities to amalgamate, while big city get to collect more taxes.
They talk representation, the levers of power(decisions) would reside with the biggest existing entity in the amalgamation(municipality).
We've already got too many seat warmers politicians don't need more self serving crooks.
They talk representation, the levers of power(decisions) would reside with the biggest existing entity in the amalgamation(municipality).
We've already got too many seat warmers politicians don't need more self serving crooks.
David Amos
@Rosco holt I Wholeheartedly Agree
Gary MacKay
The regional service districts are nothing more than another level of government with more tax dollars being spent and little to nothing to show for it. Region 8 is the best example. They could not agree on a trash budget and the province replaced 14 people with one clerk. Interestingly shortly after they were disbanded the two rival towns of Sussex and Sussex Corner mayors finally made headway on an EMO plan regarding flooding. The 12 service districts need to go. There are better ways to have communities and outlying areas work together. New York State has an excellent example that NB could easily improve on and adapt to our province. It would only take the will to actually look at what others have done that works.
David Amos
@Gary MacKay Oh So True
Norman Albert Snr
Keep asking questions they aren't going to like the answer too but it is a way of getting rid of all those tax payer dollars they have no real use for. Stupid is as stupid does. Last one out please turn out the lights!!!!
David Amos
@Norman Albert Snr "Stupid is as stupid does."
Methinks Forest Gump's Mother was a very wise lady N'esy Pas?
Methinks Forest Gump's Mother was a very wise lady N'esy Pas?
Emery Hyslop-Margison
The Higgs government needs to show leadership on this issue, and I believe they will. I live in the village of New Maryland and it's a perfect example of what's wrong with the provincial municipal structure. The village has a mayor, numerous councillors and, based on my recent count, around 17 full time employees. There are at least three municipal buildings to maintain, including one that is brand new and barely used. Snow removal and garbage collection are both contracted out and the service in both areas is the worst possible. Tax rates on property were hiked again this year as approved by the mayor and council. Most citizens of New Maryland work in Fredericton, shop in Fredericton, recreate in Fredericton and attend education institutions in Fredericton. I suspect this scenario is repeated across the province and it's a ridiculous example of political interests running amuck over public planning and administrative efficiency. Time to pull the plug and amalgamate.
Shawn McShane
@Emery Hyslop-Margison Doesn't sound like it worked with the merger of 18 local service districts with the town of Tracadie-Sheila, they want to break it up...
David Amos
@Emery Hyslop-Margison "The Higgs government needs to show leadership on this issue, and I believe they will."
Methinks I explained why during the last election as I ran against Mr Higgs' buddy Bruce Northrup and his cohorts N'esy Pas?
Methinks I explained why during the last election as I ran against Mr Higgs' buddy Bruce Northrup and his cohorts N'esy Pas?
Laurie Clark
@Emery Hyslop-Margison "The Higgs government needs to show leadership on this issue" You're expecting leadership from a CONServative??? Have fun with that!
Laurie Clark
@Emery Hyslop-Margison "The Higgs government needs to show leadership on this issue" You're expecting leadership from a CONServative??? Have fun with that!
Emery Hyslop-Margison
@Laurie Clark I'm not partisan in politics anymore Laurie. I'm more concerned with a politician doing the right thing (i.e. making decisions I agree with ;-) regardless of the flag he/she is waving. Party politics in this province has been a miserable failure.
Emery Hyslop-Margison
@David Amos I'm trying to be optimistic!
David Amos
@Emery Hyslop-Margison Good luck with that
Fred Brewer
Minister Carr says amalgamation cannot be forced. That is simply not true. Look at the forced amalgamation of Halifax and its outlying communities. The provincial government forced this and since amalgamation, the municipality has experienced dramatic growth and prosperity.
Matt Steele
@Fred Brewer ......Not sure about Nova Scotia ; but Frank McKenna forced Chatham , Newcastle , and the surrounding communities to amalgamate , and there certainly hasn't been any big growth or prosperity in that area....other than the growth of more govt. control and taxes . Just another Frank McKenna boondoggle !
Fred Brewer
@Matt Steele
Say what you will but the fact remains that at one time Saint John and Halifax were twin cities. Both were port cities and both were the capital of their respective provinces and both had the same size population.
Currently the Halifax Regional Municipality has a population that is over 400,000 and construction cranes can be seen everywhere. By comparison, Saint John has a population of 70,000 and rarely do we ever see a single construction crane. I rest my case.
Say what you will but the fact remains that at one time Saint John and Halifax were twin cities. Both were port cities and both were the capital of their respective provinces and both had the same size population.
Currently the Halifax Regional Municipality has a population that is over 400,000 and construction cranes can be seen everywhere. By comparison, Saint John has a population of 70,000 and rarely do we ever see a single construction crane. I rest my case.
David Amos
@Matt Steele Welcome Back to the Circus and say Hey to McKenna for me sometime will ya?
Matt Steele
Jean -Guy Finn has an opinion , just like every other N.B.er has.....but I doubt he is the great expert that he seems to think that he is . Changing the structure of local govt. has been played with before , and the result has been a succession of ONE term prov, govt . No doubt if Jeff Carr and the Higgs govt. starts playing around with it , then their tenure in govt. will be extremely short as well. You would think that after watching Brian Gallant for four years screwing up everything that he touched ; that politicians would realize that the taxpayers are getting fed up with these half baked ideas .
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Matt Steele "You would think that after watching Brian Gallant for four years screwing up everything that he touched ; that politicians would realize that the taxpayers are getting fed up with these half baked ideas "
Methinks thou doth jest too much N'esy Pas?
Methinks thou doth jest too much N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@Matt Steele Oh My My
pete prosser
Two against one for Riverview. No one in Riverview wants that.
You know what we are talking about.
You know what we are talking about.
David Amos
@pete prosser Methinks you are being a little redundant N'esy Pas?
pete prosser
Two against one for Riverview.
No one in Riverview wants that, and you know what we are talking about.
No one in Riverview wants that, and you know what we are talking about.
A decade after calling for extensive amalgamations, Finn report author sees few changes
Minister of local government says he plans to delve into issue this year
The Tracadie regional municipality was considered a model of how New Brunswick communities could amalgamate without provincial intervention.
But now a petition is circulating calling for a plebiscite to revoke the 2014 merger of 18 local service districts with the town of Tracadie-Sheila.
Former Tracadie councillor Norma McGraw said promises of no tax increases and economic development in the amalgamated local service districts were broken. Mayor Denis Losier also said the promised upsides haven't materialized.
"I think they pulled the wool over citizens' eyes to get us to vote," McGraw, one of several councillors who resigned last year, told Radio-Canada.
Jean-Guy Finn, a former senior New Brunswick civil servant who led a commission on reforming local governance, has followed what's happened in Tracadie. He said he's not surprised given changes he recommended in 2008 have not happened.
Finn's controversial report found the province's local governance structure wasn't sustainable. He called on the province to slash New Brunswick's municipalities and local service districts to 53 from 371.
Ten years and two months after his report, the province is far from that target. New Brunswick has 237 local service districts, eight cities, 26 towns, 61 villages, eight rural communities and one regional municipality.
Finn said little has changed under four successive provincial governments.
The changes include tweaks to the municipal funding formula and creating 12 regional service commissions to handle garbage and regional land-use planning.
"This is a reflection of a lack of leadership on behalf of the provincial government," Finn said.
The continuation of a splintered system has led to more sprawl, undesirable development at the fringes of municipalities, and costly provision of services as the province's population ages, he said.
Then-premier Shawn Graham shelved Finn's report immediately after its release, citing a weak economy and the estimated $88-million cost to implement it.
Finn believes the reforms are more relevant than when he recommended them.
Tracadie isn't the only location where strains with local governance have continued or emerged since Finn's report.
The provincial government dismissed the board of Regional Service Commission 8 this year after the group of Sussex-area mayors and local service district representatives couldn't agree on a waste collection budget.
Disputes over getting areas outside a municipality to pay for community infrastructure have flared in Sussex, Campbellton, Fredericton and the Saint John area.
Finn said it shows the need for change.
"When you add all this up, it becomes obvious something will have to be done," Finn said.
Adam Lordon, Miramichi mayor and president of the Cities of New Brunswick Association, told CBC last year that the group wants a "conversation" on the funding issue.
Jeff Carr, the minister of Environment and Local Government, said the province plans to bring people from rural and urban New Brunswick together this year to talk about local governance and municipal powers.
"The people of New Brunswick who live in these areas are going to have to decide once we get all the options on the table and all the facts on the table," Carr said.
He said the government isn't afraid to make tough choices, but said amalgamation can't be forced.
Finn said it will take leadership by the province to make any changes at this point.
"Unless we proceed comprehensively in reforming local government, I don't think we're going to accomplish much," Finn said. "We cannot just move in an ad hoc fashion like we are now because we seem to be making the situation worse rather than improving it."
Successive governments have adopted an approach that aids locally-run citizen groups considering amalgamation rather than forcing change.
Many of those attempts have failed.
Creating rural communities from local services districts around Sussex, the Nashwaak and York regions have either been rejected by voters or aborted before ballots cast.
Objections raised have included loss of rural identity, tax rates and changes to land use rules.
"People weren't ready for it," David Sweeney, chair of the group studying the idea in the Nashwaak area, said in 2017.
Last year, the former Liberal government rejected Saint John's request to study amalgamation with other communities in the region, citing a lack of support outside the city.
"Amalgamation is a non-starter, full-stop, end of story," Quispamsis Mayor Gary Clark said last year.
Merging the Greater Moncton's three communities has been a thorny topic.
Each have municipal staff, fire department, mayors and a total of 25 councillors. One ward in Moncton, Ward 3, has more than 22,000 residents, almost as many people as Dieppe's total population.
The mayors of Riverview and Dieppe told CBC last year their residents aren't interested in the idea, though a 2017 poll suggested 59 per cent of respondents in the region support amalgamation.
Tri-community mayors point to services already delivered in tandem: RCMP, transit, water and sewer.
"I don't think that there's a lot of opportunities beyond what we're already doing," Dieppe Mayor Yvon Lapierre said last year.
But now a petition is circulating calling for a plebiscite to revoke the 2014 merger of 18 local service districts with the town of Tracadie-Sheila.
Former Tracadie councillor Norma McGraw said promises of no tax increases and economic development in the amalgamated local service districts were broken. Mayor Denis Losier also said the promised upsides haven't materialized.
"I think they pulled the wool over citizens' eyes to get us to vote," McGraw, one of several councillors who resigned last year, told Radio-Canada.
Finn's controversial report found the province's local governance structure wasn't sustainable. He called on the province to slash New Brunswick's municipalities and local service districts to 53 from 371.
Finn said little has changed under four successive provincial governments.
The changes include tweaks to the municipal funding formula and creating 12 regional service commissions to handle garbage and regional land-use planning.
"This is a reflection of a lack of leadership on behalf of the provincial government," Finn said.
The continuation of a splintered system has led to more sprawl, undesirable development at the fringes of municipalities, and costly provision of services as the province's population ages, he said.
Report shelved
Then-premier Shawn Graham shelved Finn's report immediately after its release, citing a weak economy and the estimated $88-million cost to implement it.
Finn believes the reforms are more relevant than when he recommended them.
The provincial government dismissed the board of Regional Service Commission 8 this year after the group of Sussex-area mayors and local service district representatives couldn't agree on a waste collection budget.
Disputes over getting areas outside a municipality to pay for community infrastructure have flared in Sussex, Campbellton, Fredericton and the Saint John area.
"When you add all this up, it becomes obvious something will have to be done," Finn said.
Adam Lordon, Miramichi mayor and president of the Cities of New Brunswick Association, told CBC last year that the group wants a "conversation" on the funding issue.
More talk planned
Jeff Carr, the minister of Environment and Local Government, said the province plans to bring people from rural and urban New Brunswick together this year to talk about local governance and municipal powers.
"The people of New Brunswick who live in these areas are going to have to decide once we get all the options on the table and all the facts on the table," Carr said.
Finn says leadership required
Finn said it will take leadership by the province to make any changes at this point.
"Unless we proceed comprehensively in reforming local government, I don't think we're going to accomplish much," Finn said. "We cannot just move in an ad hoc fashion like we are now because we seem to be making the situation worse rather than improving it."
Successive governments have adopted an approach that aids locally-run citizen groups considering amalgamation rather than forcing change.
Many of those attempts have failed.
Creating rural communities from local services districts around Sussex, the Nashwaak and York regions have either been rejected by voters or aborted before ballots cast.
Objections raised have included loss of rural identity, tax rates and changes to land use rules.
"People weren't ready for it," David Sweeney, chair of the group studying the idea in the Nashwaak area, said in 2017.
'Amalgamation is a non-starter'
Last year, the former Liberal government rejected Saint John's request to study amalgamation with other communities in the region, citing a lack of support outside the city.
"Amalgamation is a non-starter, full-stop, end of story," Quispamsis Mayor Gary Clark said last year.
Merging the Greater Moncton's three communities has been a thorny topic.
Each have municipal staff, fire department, mayors and a total of 25 councillors. One ward in Moncton, Ward 3, has more than 22,000 residents, almost as many people as Dieppe's total population.
The mayors of Riverview and Dieppe told CBC last year their residents aren't interested in the idea, though a 2017 poll suggested 59 per cent of respondents in the region support amalgamation.
"I don't think that there's a lot of opportunities beyond what we're already doing," Dieppe Mayor Yvon Lapierre said last year.
With files from Radio-Canada
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices