Mixed feelings as election boundary review looms for Cape Breton riding - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Mixed feelings as election boundary review looms for Cape Breton riding

The Federal Electoral Boundaries Commission has proposed new boundary changes that would see Antigonish town and county folded into Cape Breton-Canso riding.

Boundary change would move the centre of gravity toward Antigonish, says political science professor

The proposed redistribution of federal electoral districts shows Cape BretonCanso expand west to include Antigonish town and county, and would be renamed Cape BretonAntigonish. (Federal Electoral Boundaries Commission for Nova Scotia)

Nova Scotia is getting a new federal electoral map and public meetings are underway to get input on the proposed boundary changes that will see Cape Breton-Canso riding expand west to include Antigonish town and county.

The Central Nova riding would cease to existand the new riding would be named Cape Breton-Antigonish.

But Cape Breton University political science professor Tom Urbaniak told Information Morning Cape Breton the possible boundary changes may not adequately represent rural populations.

"I believe that would move the centreof gravity of the current Cape BretonCanso riding to infrastructure-rich Antigonish," Urbaniak said. "So it is a fundamental change."

Population increases in Halifax metro and decreases in Guysborough and Cape Breton counties haveled to a ripple effect of boundary changes to ensure votes in eachriding carry the same weight.

The commission wants to maintain populations of about 88,000 in each riding.

"I'm very sympathetic to the commission's task," said Urbaniak, noting that the proposed area is "geographically unwieldy."

"It's a riding of very different economies, different language and cultural communities," he said.

Former Cape Breton-Canso MP Rodger Cuzner has seen two boundary changes in his years representing the area. (Norma Jean MacPhee/CBC)

Always a challenge

Rodger Cuzner,a former Liberal MP for Cape Breton-Canso, saysboundary changes are always controversial. "It's always a challenge, there's no doubt about that."

"When I first got going, it was Bras d'Or-Cape Breton. Before that, it was Cape BretonEast Richmond," Cuzner said.

But he doesn't think adding Antigonish County to the riding is a bad thing.

"I think the folks are pretty much the same. You know, it's about fishing and farming and family and fiddles," he said. "We're not that different."

The entire town and county of Antigonish would be folded into Cape Breton-Canso riding. (Robert Short/CBC)

Cuzner said one challenge future MPs might face is meeting with new community groups in a geographically vast riding. But he said it's no more difficult than visiting constituents in densely populated urban cities.

"Some of the downtown ridings in the greater Toronto area might only be three blocks by three blocks, but they go up 40 and 50 and 60 storeys," he said.

"So we spend a lot of windshield time where they spend a lot of elevator time."

Public consultations until June 28

The first of nine public meetings seeking feedback on possible boundary changes took place in Sydney on Monday evening.

Justice Cindy Bourgeois of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal chairsthe three-member electoral boundaries commission. She said five people presented for the commission.

"The predominant theme that we heard was that there was a desire to have the two ridings in Cape Breton reflect a rural riding and to reflect an urban riding, which would see our proposed boundaries in Cape Breton shifting somewhat," said Bourgeois.

"That's really the strong message that we were given by the presenters."

Public meetings are set to take place this month in Antigonish, Truro, Kentville, Yarmouth, Bridgewater, Cole Harbourand Lower Sackville. A separate virtualmeeting will be held June 27 for anyone unable to attend a community meeting.

"A proposal that makes sense for a particular location, of course, will be considered," said Bourgeois.

Bourgeois said the deadline for written submissions has been extendedto June 28.

The current federal redistribution process began in October 2021. Changes will not come into effect until April 2024 at the earliest, according to the commission's website.

With files from Information Morning Cape Breton