Wildfire Risks and Housing Shortages Put Pressure on New Brunswick Communities

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Wildfire Risks and Housing Shortages Put Pressure on New Brunswick Communities

On a recent episode of This Week Uncut, CHCO-TV’s weekly current-affairs program, two urgent topics dominated the discussion: the mounting threat of forest fires across the Maritimes and the deepening housing shortage in rural New Brunswick.

The episode opened with a sobering warning about fire risk. Danger levels in many parts of the province are now listed as “extremely high,” a designation that mirrors conditions in neighbouring Nova Scotia, where authorities have already banned all activity in wooded areas under threat of $25,000 fines. While New Brunswick has so far been spared the worst due to higher humidity and calmer winds, experts cautioned against complacency. Even small backyard or campfires, they stressed, can trigger hidden blazes that smoulder undetected in the forest floor before flaring up later under drier conditions. The message was clear: vigilance is essential, especially with weather patterns growing less predictable each summer.

From there, the conversation shifted to housing — a crisis that has been intensifying in Charlotte County and other rural regions of the province. In St. Stephen, the shortage has become impossible to ignore. Vacancy rates are near zero, and local families, seniors, and newcomers alike are struggling to find safe, affordable places to live. In response, the New Brunswick Housing Corporation has announced a push to speed up the construction of modular homes, hoping to boost supply more quickly. The model relies on prefabrication outside the community, paired with local contractors for site preparation, a system designed to shorten timelines while still delivering some of the economic benefit locally.

“St. Stephen is the hardest hit right now in our community,” one panellist noted, emphasizing how visible the crisis has become. Mayor Allan MacEachern welcomed the modular housing initiative, calling it “a step in a great direction.” He framed it as part of the larger fight against homelessness and an attempt to stabilize a volatile rental market. Other speakers highlighted the behind-the-scenes efforts of municipal officials, who continue to push for new housing solutions despite criticism over the pace of change.

Premier Susan Holt’s recent visit to the region tied the episode’s themes together. Her tour included a stop at the new Collaborative Care Clinic at Charlotte County Hospital, part of her government’s promise to expand access to primary care through modernized facilities. Holt has repeatedly cast health care and housing as twin pillars of her government’s agenda, linking both to economic stability and long-term resilience.

The program’s dual focus underscored the province’s most pressing challenges: the immediate danger of wildfires in an era of climate volatility, and the slower-burning but equally disruptive housing shortage facing rural communities. Both, the panel suggested, will test New Brunswick’s ability to adapt — requiring strong provincial leadership, coordinated municipal action, and community resolve. With St. Stephen emerging as a front-line case study, the coming months may reveal whether these solutions can be scaled quickly enough to meet the moment.

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Video Upload Date: August 27, 2025

La télévision du comté de Charlotte est la seule source de télévision communautaire indépendante du Nouveau-Brunswick. Depuis 1993, CHCO-TV fournit au sud-ouest du Nouveau-Brunswick du contenu produit localement par la communauté qu'elle dessert.

La mission de CHCO-TV est de promouvoir les médias communautaires et d'encourager, d'éduquer et d'engager les résidents du sud-ouest du Nouveau-Brunswick, d'utiliser les nouveaux médias et la technologie, d'améliorer la participation civique, d'acquérir de nouvelles compétences médiatiques et d'améliorer la culture, l'économie, la santé et qualité de vie au Nouveau-Brunswick.

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