Decades-old migration records fall as newcomers by the thousands settle in New Brunswick
CBC
Record international immigration and an historic movement of people from Ontario were the two major factors tipping New Brunswick population over 800,000 earlier this year, new estimates show.
In March, Statistics Canada's "real time" population clock for New Brunswick struck the 800,000 mark, which was seized on by Premier Blaine Higgs as an important moment for the province.
"People across the country and around the world are seeing the value, the opportunity and the reward of choosing to live here," he tweeted at the time.
On Wednesday, Statistics Canada released more information about what caused the surge in population, including the arrival of a record 6,581 immigrants into New Brunswick in the year between April 1 2021 and March 31, 2022.
It's the largest number of people from other countries to arrive in New Brunswick in a single 12 month period since records began in 1932.
Mohamed Bagha is the managing director of the Saint John Newcomers Centre, which helps immigrants settle into the community.
He said it is a much larger job now than when he began in 2013 and New Brunswick was attracting fewer than 200 immigrants per month.
"We have been doubling almost every year," said Bagha .
There "are challenges" with large numbers, he said, but immigrants themselves are generally "ecstatic" to come to Canada and have been well received in a province not as used to seeing newcomers as some others.
"I think it's getting much, much better," said Bagha, "There's a more positive attitude in communities."
Immigrants added significantly to New Brunswick's population in the last year but even as they were arriving the province experienced a second but equally historic wave of Canadians moving east.
During the year ended in March, Statistics Canada figures show 10,540 people from Ontario alone came to New Brunswick, in search of more space, cheaper housing or a change in their lifestyle.
It was the largest influx into New Brunswick from a single province in any 12 month period since records for that began in 1952.
And because only 3,005 New Brunswick residents moved in the other direction back to Ontario during the same period, the province gained a net amount of 7,535 people in the exchange.
The Salvation Army can't fundraise in the Avalon Mall after this year. It all comes down to religion
This is the last Christmas season the Salvation Army's annual kettle campaign will be allowed in the Avalon Mall in St. John's, ending a decades-long tradition.