New Brunswick electoral redistribution, 1994

New Brunswick electoral redistribution, 1994

The New Brunswick electoral redistribution of 1994 was the first re-alignment of electoral districts in New Brunswick, Canada, since 1973. Under this redistribution, several districts were changed significantly due to considerable population shifts from the northern part of the province to the south. The total number of districts was reduced from 58 to 55. Due to considerable population shifts over the course of two decades, some ridings were merged, while others were split in two, and some were unchanged.

The draft recommendations of new districts was created by a royal commission appointed by Premier Frank McKenna in late 1991, which completed its report in 1993. The report was then referred to the provincial legislature which made changes, including the addition of a district and several boundary and name changes. The changes to districts were proclaimed into law in 1994.

Largely unchanged districts

1994 district Changes from 1973
Albert Added a small portion of the town of Riverview
Bathurst unchanged
Campbellton Added a small portion of the old Dalhousie district
Caraquet Lost territory to the new Centre-Péninsule district
Dieppe-Memramcook Renamed from Memramcook to reflect the growth of Dieppe which is with its boundaries; lost small amount of territory to Tantramar while gaining approximately equal amount from Petitcodiac
Edmundston Adds small portion of the old Madawaska Centre district
Fredericton North territory east of the Nashwaak River ceded to Fredericton-Fort Nashwaak
Fredericton South Added large portion of old York South district while losing a small amount of territory to the new Fredericton-Fort Nashwaak district
Grand Falls Region The old Grand Falls district + small portions of Madawaska County
Kent South Loses small amount of territory to the new Kent district while gaining an approximately equal amount from both Petitcodiac and the old Shediac district
Kings East Loses territory to Petitcodiac
Lamèque-Shippagan-Miscou The old district Shippagan-les-Isles loses some territory to the new Centre-Péninsule district and is renamed to reflect all of the large communities in the riding
Mactaquac The old York North district less some small amounts of territory, renamed to reflect the fact that the community with in the riding has adopted the name "Mactaquac" based on its proximity to the Mactaquac Dam
Madawaska-les-Lacs Gained small amounts of Madawaska Centre
Miramichi Bay unchanged
Miramichi Centre The old district of Miramichi-Newcastle, renamed to reflect the merger of Newcastle into the new city of Miramichi
Moncton East Added small parts from neighbouring ridings while losing a small part to the new Moncton South district
Moncton North unchanged
Moncton South Most of the old Moncton West with small parts from Moncton East
Nepisiguit Old district of Nepisiguit-Chaleur less small amounts of territory ceded to Nigadoo-Chaleur along the Bay of Chaleur plus equal parts of Nigadoo-Chaleur
Nigadoo-Chaleur Small amounts of territory added from Nepisiguit-Chaleur and Resitgouche East; while some territory shifts to the new Nepisiguit district
Oromocto-Gagetown Renamed from Oromocto to reflect the importance of CFB Gagetown and added small amounts of territory from Queens South
Petitcodiac Loses that part of the city of Moncton that had been in its boundaries and gains small portions of Kings East
Restigouche West unchanged save those (unpopulated) parts of Mount Carleton Provincial Park that were not in its boundaries
Riverview Cedes a small portion of territory to Albert
Saint John Champlain The old district of East Saint John plus small parts of Saint John Park and Saint John-Fundy; renamed to reflect the new naming scheme used for Saint John districts
Saint John Lancaster Most of the old district of Saint John West with small parts of the old Saint John Harbour
Saint John-Fundy Lost small amounts of territory to Saint John-Kings and Saint John Champlain
Shediac-Cap-Pelé Renamed to reflect that the riding encompasses much more than just the town of Shediac while losing some territory to Kent South
Southwest Miramichi Gained small amounts of territory from York North and Bay du Vin
Tantramar Essentially unchanged added one poll each from two neighbouring ridings
Tracadie-Sheila Renamed to reflect the amalgamation of Tracadie and Sheila; lost some territory to the new Centre-Péninsule district
Victoria-Tobique unchanged
Woodstock The old Carleton South district plus parts of Carleton Centre and York South.
York Those parts of York South not shifted to other districts with small parts of York North

Merged districts

1994 district Created from
Carleton Merger of all of Carleton North and most of Carleton Centre some of which went to Woodstock
Charlotte Created from a merger of most of Charlotte Centre and the mainland from Charlotte Fundy with small parts of Saint John West
Dalhousie-Restigouche East Full merger of Dalhousie and Restigouche East save for a few polls from each that went to adjacent ridings
Kent All of Kent Centre merge with most of Kent North and portions of Kent South
Madawaska-la-Vallée Merger of Madawaska Centre and Madawaska South save for small parts ceded to other districts
Miramichi-Bay du Vin Merger of Chatham and approximately half of Bay du Vin
Saint John Harbour Merger of the old Saint John Harbour riding and the Saint John South riding; the name is a misnomer in that half of the old district of Saint John Harbour went to the new district of Saint John Lancaster while this includes the whole of the old Saint John South riding
Saint John Portland Merger of Saint John North and most of Saint John Park
Western Charlotte Merger of St. Stephen-Milltown and Charlotte West save for the island of Campobello which goes to the new district Fundy Isles

New districts

New district Boundary explanation
Centre-Péninsule Created from pieces of Caraquet, Shippigan-les-Ilses, Tracadie and Nepisiguit-Chaleur
Fredericton-Fort Nashwaak Created from parts of Fredericton North and Fredericton South
Fundy Isles This new riding, far smaller than the provincial average in population, consists of the three populated islands of the Bay of Fundy taking one each from old Charlotte County districts
Grand Bay-Westfield Created from parts of Kings Centre, Queens South and Saint John West in and around the town of Grand Bay-Westfield
Grand Lake Created from all of the riding of Queens North plus parts of Sunbury and Queens South
Hampton-Belleisle Created from parts of Kings Centre and Kings West
Kennebecasis The old Kings West riding less territory moved to Hampton-Belleisle and to Saint John-Kings and renamed to a more specific and commonly understood name
Moncton Crescent Created from most of the Petitcodiac riding that was within and around the city of Moncton plus several polls from neighbouring ridings
New Maryland Created from large parts of Sunbury and York South with small parts of Queens South and Charlotte Fundy
Rogersville-Kouchibouguac Created from parts of Kent North and Bay du Vin
Saint John-Kings Created from much of Kings West and small parts of the city of Saint John from the districts of Saint John-Fundy and East Saint John
Preceded by
1973
New Brunswick electoral redistributions Succeeded by
2006

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • New Brunswick electoral redistribution — Unlike most other provinces and the federal government, the province of New Brunswick until very recently had no statutory mechanism for electoral district redistribution. Thus, redistributions were not predictable and occurred only when… …   Wikipedia

  • New Brunswick electoral redistribution, 2006 — The New Brunswick electoral redistribution of 2006 was undertaken as a result of legislation introduced by Bernard Lord, the Premier of New Brunswick, Canada, on June 9, 2005. The legislation establishes a statutory requirement for redistribution …   Wikipedia

  • New Brunswick electoral redistribution, 1973 — The New Brunswick electoral redistribution of 1973 was the most radical redistribution of electoral districts in the history of New Brunswick, Canada. Under this redistribution, New Brunswick changed from a bloc voting electoral system to first… …   Wikipedia

  • New Maryland-Sunbury West — New Brunswick electoral district [[file: |frameless]] Provincial electoral district Legislature …   Wikipedia

  • Carleton (New Brunswick provincial electoral district) — Carleton is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.This district contains most of northern portions of Carleton. It was created in the 1994 electoral redistribution out of Carleton North and most of… …   Wikipedia

  • York South (New Brunswick provincial electoral district) — York South was a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It was formed in 1974 when the former multi member electoral district of York County was split into York North and York South. In the electoral… …   Wikipedia

  • Oromocto (electoral district) — Oromocto New Brunswick electoral district [[file: |frameless]] Provincial electoral district Legislature Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick …   Wikipedia

  • Fredericton-Silverwood — Infobox Canadian provincial riding name = Fredericton Silverwood province = New Brunswick legislature = Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick member type = MLA party colour = Liberal member = Rick Miles member party = Liberal census date = 2001… …   Wikipedia

  • Sunbury (provincial electoral district) — Sunbury was a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. This riding was created in the 1973 redistribution when New Brunswick moved to single member districts from Bloc voting. Prior to 1973, two members …   Wikipedia

  • Tantramar (electoral district) — Tantramar is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It was created in the 1973 electoral redistribution and first used in the 1974 election. It underwent only very minor changes in the 1994… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”