Posted: Monday, 1 June 2009
Miramichi in the midst of the storm
Miramichi, a community located in the north-east of New Brunswick, about 1½ hours north of Moncton, is a relatively small community in Canada, but one of the largest urban communities in New Brunswick. With a population of about 25,000 people, Miramichi had, not too long ago, one of the largest pulp and paper mills in Canada, employing more than 1,200 workers.
Five years ago, the region also depended upon 60 major employers and 18,000 Miramichiers were employed. Now, the pulp and paper mill is being demolished, there are only about 40 major employers left in the region, the regional hospital has become the largest employer in town, and only about 10,000 Miramichiers are currently employed.
The forestry industry died overnight
Jean-Guy Comeau, a wood-lot owner and a former mill worker demonstrates the level of devastation:
“Today, in late summer of 2009, there is not a saw or anything being used to produce something from the forest. That is rather serious. If not a saw is turning, this means that no one is at work cutting wood in the area and no one is working in the plants.”
For Dwayne Hancock, a former worker and local union president at one of the mills that was closed in the last 3 years, the situation is serious: “It’s definitely been a difficult time on the River. I think a lot of it has been kind of sugar-coated. I guess that would be nice way of saying it. The forestry industry died overnight and nobody said anything. Nobody did anything. We were the lowest paid OSB mill in North America.... We had g ood jobs. We thought we had some job security but unfortunately we just didn’t fit into the corporate plan of the company.”
Workers are doing all they can to cope with the rapid deterioration of the labour market in Miramichi. They are surviving with severance pay, Employment Insurance cheques, short-term training support, insecure and low-paid job opportunities in the region or by travelling daily or weekly in and out of the region for job opportunities in the province or across the country.
Out West and back again
According to Elisabeth Murray, a union activist and a worker at the regional hospital, “What we have noticed is that because of the mills closing, there’s a lot of casuals that are coming in that are a spouse of somebody that was in the facility already.” This indicates that men who are forced out of full-time and perman
ent industrial jobs are finding part-time and casual in the public and service sector.
John Richard, a worker at the local coop and local union activist has seen men try to find work anywhere they can. Some have been lucky enough to find jobs at the coop. “We have 13 or 14 guys that used to work at the mill that now work where we are, be it they’re truck drivers, they’re maintenance people, they’re production people.”
Georges Estey, a business manager of the United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters, Local 799 in Miramichi, understands the consequences of the mills closure means men will travel long distances to find work. “Most of these guys are 50 or under, some of them 55 years old, they still have to work and maintain a living as far as I can tell, and they’re all still working. There are no jobs to be had here so I would say the majority of them are still doing the out west and back again.”
I can’t plan for the future right now.
Dwayne Hancock lost his job at the mill and now works at a call centre.
“The call centre I’m at now is $12 an hour. I can’t plan for the future right now. I’m not contributing anything to my pension. I’m just trying to play catch up for past bills and trying to prepare for the winter. My house needs work. It is an older home and there’s things that need to be done. My car finally died and I had to buy another car. It’s the first time in 15 years that I actually had to go backwards and had to buy an older car as opposed to upgrading to another car but I just couldn’t afford a car payment, I just couldn’t do it, there’s just no way.”
Male workers are not the only one taking the hits. Families and the community in general also suffer. When asked about usage of their services, women shelter representatives say they are now running at full capacity - something that they haven’t seen in recent history. The coordinator of Miramichi’s food bank is seeing a 10% monthly growth in families requesting support.
Says Dwayne Hancock, “It was hard on a lot of families, I received a lot of late night phone calls from members who were just distraught and just didn’t know what they were going to do.”
Bobbie-Jo Metallic is a young aboriginal woman who recently graduated from of culinary art school but is currently unemployed. “I think a lot of people are really struggling. I think a lot of them a very depressed. I see a lot of my friends have turned to drinking which is not great. I mean you need that money for groceries. Why drink it?”
Next year is going to be tougher
For Delalene Foran and many other Miramichiers, the economic storm in Miramichi is not over. “Myself I don’t think it’s hit here yet, I think maybe next year is going to be tougher because a lot of people are on unemployment now. They got their stamps. They got their severance pay from the mill.”
Dwayne Hancock worries about the future. “Unfortunately a lot of us see Miramichi slowly turning into a retirement city. You can’t measure your economic growth on the [retirees]. If you don’t have economic and job growth, if your numbers in schools keep dropping and there’s no children coming into the community. That’s where the money is spent - by families. If there’s no more families, if there’s only couples, then things are definitely going to dry up. Things are definitely going have an impact. The real estate didn’t take the big plunge that everyone expected it too, but it will in the next little while, especially now with the jobs drying up in the West.
It’s going to take courage
Despite these major issues, Miramichiers are proud of their community and have hopes about the future, but they question the old way of dealing with these challenges. For Inka Milewski, a environmentalist and researcher based in Miramichi there has to be a better way of doing things.
“These mill closures are the opportunity to do thing differently and there’s no reason why things can’t happen for the Miramichi that are far better for the community than they have been in the past . But it’s going to take courage, and it’s going to take some vision. It’ going to take some frank, frank analysis. They throw out half-baked ideas. If you don’t know what the problem is you can’t even pursue the solution.”
Download a full overview of Miramichi, New Brunswick in PDF format.


Communities in Crisis - Miramichi, New Brunswick