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May 12: 2025 New Brunswick municipal elections; Jun 7: 2025 Green Party of Prince Edward Island leadership election; Jun 14: 2025 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election [10] [11] Aug 16: Municipal election in Sandy Beach, Alberta [12] Sept: 2025 Green Party of British Columbia leadership election [13]
The following contains lists of schools in the Canadian province of New Brunswick into public school, private schools, and former school categories. New Brunswick has four Anglophone school districts and three Francophone school districts: Anglophone North School District (ASD-N) Anglophone South School District (ASD-S) Anglophone East School ...
Established under the Education Act of New Brunswick, a District Education Council (DEC) provides a local governance and community input mechanism at the district level. [1] DECs consist of 11 to 13 education councillors elected for four-year terms, with responsibility for elections given to the Elections NB corporation, officiated by the Chief ...
In the 2014-15 school year, New Brunswick budgeted to spend $64.8-million in order to bus 90,000 students; or in other words, $720 for each student. [36] The Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick's only Acadian MLA in March 2015 threatened to split from the party if discussion were re-opened on school bus re-unification. [37]
Statutory holiday under various names in Alberta, Ontario, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. British Columbia previously celebrated Family Day on the second Monday in February between 2013 and 2018. [23] However, British Columbia celebrates Family Day on the third Monday in February from 2019 onward. [24]
It provided that a general election would be held between March 1 and May 31, 2012, and after that, in the same three-month period in the fourth calendar year after a general election. [12] Amendments enacted by Jason Kenney's United Conservative government in 2021 eliminated the three-month period and fixed the date of the election on the last ...
Education in British Columbia comprises public and private primary and secondary schools throughout the province. Like most other provinces in Canada, education is compulsory from ages 6–16 (grades 1–10), although the vast majority of students remain in school until they graduate from high school at the age of 18.
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