A New Riding Map for New Brunswick
COMMENTARY
20
SEP 2012 05:41PM
Editor’s
Note: The following is the transcription of a presentation
given by Chris Baker to the Federal Riding Boundaries Commission in Fredericton
on Sept. 13, 2012.
I want to thank the
Commissioners for the opportunity to comment on their proposal for the revised
federal riding boundaries in New Brunswick. This is a challenging and complex
task, and public comment on your work will strengthen the final
proposal.
It is a benefit to
this process to have distinguished jurists take on the task of determining
riding boundaries. Your patience and experience, especially in weighing various
points of view and reconciling conflicting position, will serve New Brunswickers
and the democratic process well.
My name is Chris Baker
and I am a resident of Fredericton. This will be the fourth boundary commission
that I have appeared before and my second experience at the federal
level.
My profession is
public opinion research with an emphasis on public policy. I work with numbers
and with information, both of which are crucial to the exercise that we are
participating in today.
Our system of
representative democracy has very deep and ancient roots. Even before the time
of the Norman Conquest, the rulers in that ancient time required the consent of
the governed, which was granted through the gathering of local leaders and
representatives. Even though our current parliamentary system is more formal and
more modern, the importance of community representation is still important in
the days of universal franchise and representation by
population.
While we often speak
of numeric equality as an important factor in the representation that is
provided at the local level, we also need to speak to the quality of the
representation that can be affected, positively and negatively, by riding
boundaries. It is for this reason that the Commissioners have the discretion,
within limits, to create ridings that are not strictly equal in
population.
In addition to the
ability to reflect the community of interest, there are a number of important
factors that need to be taken into consideration when determining the riding
boundaries.
As much as possible,
ridings should be geographically compact. Further, there should be strong links
– economic, social and physical – between all parts of the proposed
riding.
The demographic and
social composition of the riding should be balanced and fair, especially when
minority communities are involved. I should state that this factor does not
refer exclusively to language and includes factors such as economic activity and
socio-economic status.
Which future
demographic trends cannot be considered in your deliberations, there is no
question that the demographic changes identified in the 2011 Census will have a
profound impact on the way ridings are determined. We have seen a dramatic
growth of urban, suburban and satellite communities in the South. There are
areas in rural New Brunswick that are losing population, more so in the North
than in the South.
I believe that the
time has come to consider some new options in the way that riding boundaries are
constituted in our Province.
I would like to
present the Commission with an alternate version of how the ridings in our
province should be constructed. To the best of my ability, I have reviewed the
new census information and, using what I know about the various regions and
communities in New Brunswick, have prepared a new riding map for the
Province.
This proposal provides
stability for the ridings in the northern and central parts of New Brunswick. It
also takes a fresh approach to the traditional riding boundaries in the
South.
Let’s start with the
South and the most critical failing of the current (and proposed) boundaries. I
propose that the City of Saint John, currently represented by one riding
adhering to the city boundaries, be split between two ridings – Saint
John-Charlotte and Saint John-Central Kings.
The greater Saint John
region extends far beyond the Saint John City boundaries. To the west, the
region extends to the growing communities of Grand Bay-Westfield, Lorneville and
Lepreau. To the North, the region includes Quispamsis, Rothesay, the Kingston
Peninsula. To the East, St., Martins and parts of the Fundy region are closely
tied to the urban area.
To have one riding
that is only the City of Saint John severs these other closely bound communities
from their central core. Further, putting the suburban and bedroom communities
of the Saint John region into largely rural ridings marginalizes their community
of interest, which would be better served by two urban-rural ridings centered on
Saint John.
Southwest New
Brunswick, as proposed, is a large and disparate riding that runs from the City
of Fredericton to the Fundy Isles. While it can be argued that the disparity of
distance is not fully resolved by creating a riding that includes part of the
City of Saint John, the western part of Saint John County and Charlotte County,
the riding is both more geographically compact and better represents the
interests of residents than the current riding.
Fundy–Quispamsis is
highly problematic, taking in the suburban areas of the Moncton CMA and the
Saint John region, with all the rural parts in between. A new riding, Saint
John-Central Kings, would combine the City of Saint John with the surrounding
urban, suburban and rural areas east of the Saint John River Valley, again
resulting in a riding that is more compact and more representative of the
communities it intends to serve.
Moving east, I am
proposing that a new riding, Sussex-Riverview, take the place of the current
riding of Fundy Royal. This new riding, which includes the Towns of Sussex and
Riverview, would be a urban-rural mix that is more compact and more homogenous
from a socio-economic point of view. While Riverview is part of the Moncton CMA,
it has string ties to the surrounding rural areas and almost exclusively
Anglophone.
By moving Riverview
into this riding, we also help repair the linguistic balance of the new Moncton
riding that was altered when the Commissioners decided to move Dieppe into the
riding of Beausejour. The City of Moncton has enough population to be
represented by one riding.
I would suggest that
part of Moncton Parish be added to Sussex-Riverview with the portion on the east
side of Dieppe retained by Dieppe-Beausejour. This would reduce the population
of Dieppe Beausejour which, at 92,000 people, is the largest riding in terms of
population.
With regard to
Miramichi, the Commissioners have moved the North Shore communities of Belldune,
Durham and Colburne to the riding of Madawaska-Restigouche. Although this is a
geographic anomaly, I would recommend that these communities be restored to the
Miramichi riding, which would also increase its population to better respect the
principle of representation by population. The stability of representation would
also be maintained.
Of course, if
Madawaska-Restigouche loses population in the east, it should take up more
population in the west. Therefore, I recommend that Saint Andre, Drummond and
Grand Falls become part of the this riding in the North
West.
With changes in the
south, the riding of Tobique-Saint John Valley has an opportunity to include the
valley communities that were previously in Southwest N.B. This provides a more
homogenous, compact and populated riding.
As for the Fredericton
riding, there is no question in my mind that the communities of Chipman and
Minto are part of the community of interest that should be represented in this
riding.
Overall, this proposal
provides a more coherent presentation of the communities of interest that should
be represented in the new riding boundaries. Further, it mitigates the extremes
of population represented by Dieppe-Beausejour at one end and Miramichi at the
other.
I will provide a copy
of this proposed riding map, as well as the Excel spreadsheet used to calculate
the riding populations, to the Commission for their
reference.
Thank
you.
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Chris
Baker is President of
Continuum Research, a New Brunswick-based public opinion research firm
specializing in public affairs and public policy. The assistance
of William
Blanchette in the preparation of
the map and demographic analysis is gratefully appreciated.
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