Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Protected Natural Area (PNA) is a sanctuary set aside for its unusual or significant local characteristics. Logging is prohibited in all PNAs. Six of the more than 200 PNAs are Class I, allowing access only for scientific research and education and requiring a permit to visit; the remainder are Class II, allowing hunting, fishing, snaring ...
Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick; Eastern College; Maritime College of Forest Technology; McKenzie College; Moncton Flight College; New Brunswick College of Craft and Design; New Brunswick Community College; OLS Academy; Oulton College; Union of New Brunswick Indians Training Institute, Inc. (UNBITI) Atlantic Business College ...
The New Brunswick Community Colleges Act established two community colleges, one anglophone, the New Brunswick Community College (NBCC), and one francophone, Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick (CCNB), each with its own Board of Governors. Each college also manages its funds separately, but both report to the Minister of Post-Secondary ...
Pages in category "Protected areas of New Brunswick" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
Former logo of the college. New Brunswick Community College offers over 90 regular programs across 18 sectors. It provides other training in many apprenticeable trades, to corporate clients, and individuals through part-time courses. New Brunswick Community College was one of the first colleges in North America to offer a program in video game ...
In New Brunswick, burial grounds are mainly covered under the Cemetery Companies Act. However, the Heritage Conservation Act protects places that have been used in the past for the placement of human remains or related objects, including old family plots, ancient burial grounds and abandoned cemeteries.
The Maritime College of Forest Technology (MCFT), formerly the Maritime Forest Ranger School (MFRS), in Fredericton, New Brunswick was established in April 1946, as a co-operative effort of the provincial governments of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and the wood-using industries of the two provinces. The MCFT fulfils a regional mandate.
Mount Carleton Provincial Park, established in 1970, is the largest provincial park in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada. It encompasses 174 square kilometres (67 sq mi) in the remote highlands of north-central New Brunswick. The park is a lesser-known gem of the Atlantic Canadian wilderness.