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Department of Education and Early Childhood Development (New Brunswick)

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Department of Education and Early Childhood Development
Agency overview
Formed2010
JurisdictionNew Brunswick
Parent departmentGovernment of New Brunswick

The Department of Education and Early Childhood Development is an executive agency of the Government of New Brunswick, Canada. It is responsible for the administration of the New Brunswick public education system. Its primary and secondary schools are divided into seven districts: four anglophone districts and three francophone districts, each functioning as a separate unit.

On May 14, 1998, it also took over responsibility for universities and community colleges. However, community colleges were later transferred to the Department of Training and Employment Development on March 23, 2000. On February 14, 2006, the department returned to its pre-1998 configuration, with responsibility solely for primary and secondary schools when universities were moved to the new Department of Post-secondary Education and Training.

In October 2010, it took responsibility for early childhood education from the Department of Social Development and its name changed from the Department of Education to the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development.

Ministers

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# Minister Term Government
1. A. P. Paterson July 16, 1938 – January 10, 1940 under Allison Dysart
2. Charles H. Blakeney January 10, 1940 – March 13, 1940
March 13, 1940 - November 2, 1948 under John B. McNair
3. James W. Brittain November 2, 1948 – October 8, 1952
4. Claude Taylor October 8, 1952 – July 8, 1960 under Hugh John Flemming
5. Henry Irwin July 8, 1960 – April 5, 1966 under Louis Robichaud
6. W. Wynn Meldrum April 5, 1966 – November 12, 1970
7. Lorne McGuigan November 12, 1970 – December 3, 1974 under Richard Hatfield
8. Gerald Merrithew December 3, 1974 – December 20, 1976
9. Charles Gallagher December 20, 1976 – October 30, 1982
10. Clarence Cormier October 30, 1982 – October 3, 1985
11. Jean-Pierre Ouellet October 3, 1985 – October 27, 1987
12. Shirley Dysart October 27, 1987 – October 8, 1991 under Frank McKenna
13. Paul Duffie October 9, 1991 – April 27, 1994
14. Vaughn Blaney April 27, 1994 – September 26, 1995
15. James E. Lockyer September 26, 1995 – July 23, 1997
16. Bernard Richard July 23, 1997 – October 13, 1997
October 13, 1997 – February 6, 1998 under Ray Frenette
17. Bernard Thériault (interim) February 6, 1998 – May 14, 1998
18. Bernard Richard (2nd time) May 14, 1998 – June 21, 1999 under Camille Thériault
19. Elvy Robichaud June 21, 1999 – October 9, 2001 under Bernard Lord
20. Dennis Furlong October 9, 2001 – June 27, 2003
21. Madeleine Dubé June 27, 2003 – February 14, 2006
22. Claude Williams February 14, 2006 – October 3, 2006
23. Kelly Lamrock October 3, 2006 – June 2009 under Shawn Graham
24. Roland Haché June 2009 - October 12, 2010
25. Jody Carr October 12, 2010 – September 23, 2013 under David Alward
26. Marie-Claude Blais September 23, 2013 – October 7, 2014
27. Serge Rousselle October 7, 2014 – 6 June 2016[1][2] under Brian Gallant
28. Brian Kenny 6 June 2016[1][2]-9 November 2018
29. Dominic Cardy 9 November 2018 – 13 October 2022[3] under Blaine Higgs
30. Bill Hogan 13 October 2022 – 2 November, 2024
31. Claire Johnson 2 November, 2024 - Present under Susan Holt

[4]See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b cbc.ca: "Full list of Brian Gallant's new cabinet", 6 Jun 2016
  2. ^ a b macleans.ca: "Who’s what after New Brunswick cabinet shuffle", 6 Jun 2016
  3. ^ "Here's a full list of Blaine Higgs's new cabinet CBC News". CBC News. November 9, 2018.
  4. ^ "Members of the 61st Legislative Assembly - Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick". www.legnb.ca.
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