Quote:
Originally Posted by MonctonRad
I'm pretty sure that if you ever conducted a plebiscite in SJ over whether a name change is desirable, you would likely be distressed by the fact that it would be overwhelming defeated.
I suppose in the spirit of reconciliation, you could propose the new community name be Wolastoq City, and rename the river at the same time.
BTW, it just occurred to me that in the Maritimes, Saint John is frequently abbreviated to "SJ". I don't believe I have ever heard St. John's (NL) ever abbreviated to anything.
Maybe this could be the key differentiator........
|
I believe St. John’s is referred to as SJ, too, but perhaps not as frequently as our SJ is.
I certainly wouldn’t be distressed, whatsoever, as I know such a plebiscite would never happen, even if a name change would be good for the city in terms of branding and marketing to lessen the confusion with St. John’s. We missed the opportunity at the turn of the century when the name was changed from St. John to Saint John.
However, in an amalgamation situation, I think a name different than Saint John for the resulting regional municipality would absolutely be the right way to go about it. Almost 50% of the Saint John CMA lives outside the city proper, and most of the residents outside the city associate a lot of very negative stereotypes with Saint John. They especially won’t want to join up if it means they’d have to be “part of Saint John”.
So not only would it make more sense to go with Wolastoq Regional Municipality, Fundy Regional Municipality, or something else different than Saint John Regional Municipality in terms of making amalgamation a less bitter pill to swallow for the outlying suburbs, it would also start to help lessen the confusion that exists between St. John’s and Saint John and their nearly identical names.
Using “Wolastoq” as the name to refer to the entire SJ+KV region could be quite an effective way to kill two birds with one stone… or three birds for that matter, since it would also be in the spirit of reconciliation by meaningfully recognizing the First Nations who were here long before Samuel de Champlain’s 1604 “discovery”. It would be a lot more meaningful than the typical land recognition statements, which imo, often aren’t much more than kabuki theatre.