• About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
The Brief
NB MEDIA CO-OP
Events
Share a story
  • Articles en français
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Gender
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Videos
  • NB debrief
  • Articles en français
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Gender
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Videos
  • NB debrief
No Result
View All Result
NB MEDIA CO-OP
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

Kedgwick women fight against chemical spraying

by Tracy Glynn
November 3, 2009
Reading Time: 3min read
manifestation_0071

Betty St. Pierre presenting a petition against forest spraying to her MLA.

On Sept. 4 people working in the woods of Northern New Brunswick, including more than 50 women planting trees, were doused with chemicals from a helicopter that was spraying the public forest to kill the hardwoods in a young softwood plantation.

According to Betty St. Pierre, a spokeswoman for the group of people who say they were sprayed, the people sprayed were told to leave the area in Kedgwick because of imminent spraying but before they had a chance to leave they were sprayed. St. Pierre said the people sprayed experienced running eyes, sore throats, nausea and other symptoms after being sprayed with herbicide.

Many of the women and men are afraid to speak publicly about the event for fear of losing their jobs planting trees. St. Pierre, who scales trees for a living, says that somebody needs to speak up. “We have had enough. They are scaring people by telling them there will be no work.” St. Pierre says that since the incident many people have relayed stories of people getting sprayed while fishing or working in the woods.

foresticide_316
Containers of Cheminova Forza herbicide found on the J.D. Irving airstrip in Juniper, New Brunswick.

The frustration is apparent in St. Pierre’s voice as she describes the community and surrounding forest. “A man reported fish kills along a stream here after the last spraying. It is not normal to do that to the forest. We can’t prove we are sick because of the spraying but cancer and pesticides have been linked. People are starting to question why do so many people in our community, in Northern New Brunswick, have cancer and rare cancers,” stated St. Pierre.

A new high-tech wind tunnel was unveiled at the Acadia Research Forest near Fredericton on the same day that the news broke across the province that women sprayed in Kedgwick were calling for a ban on aerial forest spraying. The H.J. Irving-J.J.C. Picot Wind Tunnel will be used to determine the exact location of where spraying planes should fly depending on the weather and wind.

St. Pierre says her message for the provincial government is to ban all pesticides. She and a group of women have held community demonstrations and have collected 5,000 signatures to a petition calling for a ban on aerial forest spraying. They plan to present the petition to the Premier when the Legislature reopens on November 17.

manifestation
A demonstration against forest herbicide spraying in Kedgwick, NB in the fall of 2009.

On their website, the New Brunswick Department of Natural Resources admits it has tried alternatives to spraying herbicides on New Brunswick’s public forest but continues to use herbicides because they are cheaper and involve less labour: “Natural Resources has tried clearing the brush using hand tools and brush saws. Cut stems re-sprout the following year, causing severe competition; therefore, these treatments must be repeated often. This raises the cost to over 10 times that of a single application of herbicide.” According to the Department of Natural Resources, herbicides are sprayed on approximately 25 per cent of the softwood land cut over each year in the province.

In late January of this year, the province of New Brunswick announced a new plan for the forest that would allow the area of plantations on public lands to increase to 28%. Plantations currently represent 10% of the public forest. More plantations will mean an increase in herbicide spraying. The increase in plantation area concerns scientists working with the Greater Fundy Ecosystem Research Group. They recommend that plantations not exceed more than 15% of the forest area in order to preserve the biodiversity.

St. Pierre points to other regions in Canada that have banned spraying. No herbicides have been sprayed on Quebec’s public forest since 2001. Carol Hughes and Glen Thibeault, two NDP MPs in Northern Ontario, are expressing concerns with aerial forest spraying. Hughes is calling for an investigation on the impacts of aerial spraying of glyphosate over forests in Northern Ontario.

Over half of the forest in New Brunswick are deemed “Crown” lands or public lands. The land has never been ceded by the indigenous people.

Tracy Glynn is on the board of the NB Media Co-op.

Tags: Betty St. PierreCrown forestglyphosateKedgwick
Send

Related Posts

Housing summit heavily weighted towards business interests: critics
Environment

Delays on herbicide restrictions show province aims to protect industry, says Green MLA [video]

September 15, 2025

Green Party MLA Megan Mitton says she isn't satisfied with answers from government officials about delays in the implementation of...

Delayed restrictions on herbicide prompt failing grade from environmental group [video]
Environment

Delayed restrictions on herbicide prompt failing grade from environmental group [video]

September 10, 2025

After last year's provincial election, Premier Susan Holt instructed several of her newly-minted Cabinet ministers to restrict aerial herbicide spraying,...

New Brunswick’s not-so-mysterious illness
Environment

New Brunswick’s not-so-mysterious illness

May 22, 2025

It’s amazing how media and science mix so poorly when one subordinates itself to the other. One single study published...

Pourquoi rendre la maladie mystérieuse ?
Articles en français

Pourquoi rendre la maladie mystérieuse ?

May 13, 2025

C’est fou comme les médias et la science font mauvais ménage, alors que les uns sont certains de se placer...

Load More

Recommended

A photograph of a wooden H-frame utility pole supporting three overhead power lines, silhouetted against a pale purple and blue winter sky. Large mounds of snow are piled in the foreground.

NB Power continues to cut people’s electricity during deep freezes

5 days ago
It is time for a reset of the Sisson mine’s Environmental Impact Assessment

It is time for a reset of the Sisson mine’s Environmental Impact Assessment

6 days ago
Canada must end all relations with Israel

Addressing the legal system as an obstacle to successful social struggle

5 days ago
Green leader links Centre Village gas/diesel plant to Lorneville data centre

Green leader links Centre Village gas/diesel plant to Lorneville data centre

2 days ago
NB Media Co-op

© 2019 NB Media Co-op. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
  • Share a Story
  • Calendar
  • Archives

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
  • Events
  • Share a Story
  • COVID-19
  • Videos
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Politics
  • Rural

© 2019 NB Media Co-op. All rights reserved.

X
Did you like this article? Support the NB Media Co-op! Vous avez aimé cet article ? Soutenez la Coop Média NB !
Join/Donate