N.S. Supreme Court rules Chticamp should have protected Acadian electoral district - Action News
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Nova Scotia

N.S. Supreme Court rules Chticamp should have protected Acadian electoral district

The Fdration acadienne de la Nouvelle-cosse says communities around Chticamp in northern Cape Breton need representation in the legislature to recognize their unique language and culture.

Acadian federation says northern Cape Breton communities need representation to recognize unique culture

A waterfront is shown with a lighthouse in the background
The Chticamp boardwalk is shown in 2021. (George Mortimer/CBC)

People in and around Chticamp could be voting in a new riding in the next provincial election, after a Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruling that the northern Cape Breton area deserves to have a special Acadian electoral district.

According to the decision, the lack of a protected district for Chticamp is an unjustified breach of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The court gave the provincial electoral boundaries commission 20 months to draw up the new riding.

Jules Chaisson, executive director of the Acadian group Fdration acadienne de la Nouvelle-cosse, said the ruling was welcome after a long fight.

"If you consider the history of the province, it has always considered the Chticamp region an Acadian community," Chaisson told CBC Radio's Information Morning Cape Breton.

"There's not as many voters as there are in other ridings,but it still has its own identity which should be preserved, and to help to preserve that identity, I think the Chticamp region should have its representation in the legislative assembly. That's what we've been fighting for for the past 10 years."

Chticamp is in Inverness County, in an electoral district called Inverness. According to the court ruling, the new riding is to include the village of Chticamp and the larger surrounding region, which comprises the villages of Petit-tang, Belle-Marche, Plateau, Point Cross, Grand-tang, Saint-Joseph-du-Moine, Terre-Noire, Cap-le-Moine, Belle-Cte and East Margaree.

Fight dates back to 2012

The federation's fight dates back to 2012, when an electoral boundaries commission report recommended keeping protected seats for minorities in a reconfiguration of the electoral map, but rejected the creation of one for Chticamp.

The commissionincluded the existing electoral districts of Argyle, Clare and Richmond to encourage Acadian representation in the Nova ScotiaLegislature, and the new district of Preston to encourage Black Nova Scotian representation.

The NDP government vetoed the recommendationthough, eliminating the protected seats.

The federation launched a court challenge and in 2019, a commission report again called for the return of the protected ridings, but still left out Chticamp.

The Acadian federation said in a news release this week that the commission "ignored the cultural and linguistic specificities of Chticamp" in its report.

"Chticamp has a unique culture," Chaisson said. "It's a unique community and it should be protected like the other ridings."

Chaisson said the court ruling this week is just a first stepbecause there's always the possibility the province could appeal the decision.

With files from CBC Radio's Information Morning Cape Breton

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