When brutal storms strike, some rural areas can't cope, municipalities say - Action News
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New Brunswick

When brutal storms strike, some rural areas can't cope, municipalities say

The ice storm in January was a "chaotic" event for local service districts, compared to nearby municipalities on the Acadian Peninsula, says a group representing francophone municipalities.

Francophone say they should be able to intervene in local service districts after dramatic weather

New Brunswick's Acadian Peninsula was coated in ice in late January 2017. (Jerome Luc Paulin/Twitter)

Francophone municipalities are calling on the New Brunswick government to let municipalities take responsibility fornearby local service districts during majorweather calamities such as the 2017 ice storm.

The ice storm in January was a "chaotic" event for local service districts on the Acadian Peninsula, said Luc Desjardins, president of the AssociationfrancophonedesMunicipalitsdu Nouveau-Brunswick/

"In municipalities, they know their territory, they have means to intervene, they have plans in place," said Desjardins, who is also mayor of Petit-Rocher. "They have the personnel that's going to help."

During the ice storm, local service districts in the Lamque and Shippagan areas did not have the resources to assemble volunteers or set up shelters, he said.

"There was nobody responsible to take care of them except forthe Department of Local Government," he said. "But there's only one employee for the whole peninsula that's taking care of them."

In the new regional municipality ofTracadie, meanwhile, nine shelters were quickly set up for people who lost power during the storm.

This time it was in the peninsulabut it could be anywhere else.- Luc Desjardin, Petit-Rocher mayor

At its peak, the ice storm that startedin southern New Brunswick on Jan. 24 and spread to the northeast the following day left 133,000 homes and businesses without electricity. About 200,000 customers lost service at some point as a result of the storm.

Two people died and 45 people were taken to hospital because of carbon monoxide poisoning, in most cases from the use of generators or barbecues in garages or homes.

In major weather events, Petit-Rocher Mayor Luc Desjardins says, more help is needed for local service districts across the province. (Bridget Yard/CBC)
On Thursday,the municipalities group released a 28-page report offering 22 recommendations to improve emergency measures if a similar disabling storm happens again.

"If we had a big freeze after the storm, like -30 [C] or something, we would've had maybe hundreds of deaths on our hands," Desjardins said. "The temperatures stayed really warm and that helped people not to die in their homes."

He said the Emergency Measures Act already allows the minister, in consultation with municipalities, to giveresponsibility to municipalities to intervene when emergency conditions exist inadjacent local service districts.

"We want the minister to look at that, we want to have a committee set up and see who would be involved and the cost that would be shared," he said. "That would at least put on the field, a system of intervention that is lacking right now."

A responsibility to help

With climate constantly changing, Desjardins said, he hopesthe government will respond to the request before next winter.

After post-tropical storm Arthur in 2014, a committee was established to make recommendations for future storms, but it was dissolved, he said.

"We want to have real action after the study is going to be made public," Desjardinssaid."This time it was in the peninsulabut it could be anywhere else."

He said the association is pushing to have allareas of New Brunswick formed into municipalities, adding that 85 per cent of the province does not identify with amunicipality.

"[This] is like Middle Ages for modern society," he said.

With files from Information Morning Fredericton