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Service New Brunswick (French: Service Nouveau-Brunswick), commonly referred to as SNB, is a Crown corporation in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.
Following the lead of Nova Scotia in 1994 and Prince Edward Island in 2005, the Government of New Brunswick created ANB on June 6, 2007 and began provincial operations on December 16, 2007. A 10-year performance-based operating contract was awarded to New Brunswick EMS Inc. which is a subsidiary of Medavie EMS .
RNBR Colour Guard at Queen's jubilee celebration in Fredericton, 10 Oct 2022. 37 Canadian Brigade Group (French: 37 e Groupe-brigade du Canada) is a reserve component brigade of the Canadian Army, which supervises Militia units in 5th Canadian Division for New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Primary service county Secondary service county Tertiary service county Founded in community Upgraded Bed count Operated by Notes Chaleur Regional: General: Bathurst: Gloucester: Northumberland: Restigouche: Vitalité: Campbellton Regional: General: Campbellton: Gaspé Peninsula: Restigouche: Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine: Northumberland ...
This began with the Moncton-Longs Creek section of Route 2 which started as a toll highway but was changed to a hidden toll arrangement whereby the provincial government pays the charges for vehicle usage and the company that built the highway operates and maintains the road for a period of 25 years after it opened in 2002.
The Canadian province of New Brunswick contained 236 local service districts prior to governance reforms in 2023; [1] another 80 former LSDs were previously dissolved or incorporated. Reforms to New Brunswick's local governance system on 1 January 2023 abolished local service districts.
Most settlement in the peninsula occurred as a result of the Expulsion of the Acadians during the Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign (1758), where British personnel forcibly removed them from their homes, mostly in southern New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Fishing is the dominant industry on the peninsula, with a large agricultural sector as well.
The New Brunswick Electric Power Commission (NBEPC) was created on April 24, 1920, under the ministry of Peter Veniot (Public Works). Immediately, the commission, headed by its first president, C. W. Robinson, launched the construction of a C$2 million hydroelectric dam at Musquash, west of Saint John.