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Friday, September 23, 2005
Walk softly, swing a big stick

If the Take Back the Night walk was merely symbolic, it could be easily dismissed as a well-intentioned but naive protest about the loss of safety in public places after the sun goes down.

There may have been a city where anyone could walk carefree, day or night, but if such a place ever existed outside of our imaginations, it is long gone.

City parks generally close at 9 p.m. to discourage the casual vandalism that is often a part of drinking parties in the urban forest after dark.

There are places in every city where no one ventures after dark without the risk of confrontation with the drunk or drug-addled. Queen Street in Toronto, Edmonton's Whyte Avenue and downtown Yellowknife come to mind.

The real value of Take Back the Night is its power to raise awareness about violence against women in Yellowknife and the Northwest Territories.

Statistics gathered by organizers of the event are disturbing. The most pathetic is that most assaults in Yellowknife in 2004 were committed by family members or intimate partners, and that nine out of 10 times, women were the victims.

The rate of women and children fleeing abusive homes for a women's shelter in the Territories is eight times the national average. The problem is understated, according to some: many who are assaulted or threatened or harassed don't come forward.

Most serious violent offenders in the Territories are destined to re-offend, just as they are in the rest of Canada, but here the recidivism rate is a depressing 83 per cent. Prisons are not places of rehabilitation, they are where society warehouses misfits through endless cycles of arrest, conviction and incarceration.

It doesn't help that the average sentence for serious offences, sexual assault, aggravated assault and murder is shorter in the North: five years compared to six years for the rest of Canada.

Foot or bicycle patrols by police and volunteers might help women regain a feeling of safety on city streets and walking trails, but those efforts will be undermined if courts continue to send the wrong message.

In a world as small as the North, there is no room for violent offenders who repeat again and again and again.

It's a sad truth, but some offenders need to be put behind bars and kept there. Heavier sentences would send a message that society will not tolerate violent behaviour, regardless of where it is directed.


Housing dreams

Editorial Comment
Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News


Make no mistake about it, people are going to have strong feelings on both sides of the ledger concerning the Government of Nunavut's (GN) new strategy for staff housing.

For some, the initiative will be viewed as nothing more than an attempt by the GN to bolster the percentage of Nunavummiut staff by dissuading southerners from seeking employment in the North.

The argument has some merit, considering Nunavut Housing Corp. president Peter Scott was quick to point out that 55 per cent of government positions are still held by non-beneficiaries.

Even with the phase-in period, the two areas of primary concern are education and health professionals.

Percentages or not, we still need quality teachers and health-care professionals in Nunavut and we're not going to train enough local doctors to meet our needs during the next five years.

While the picture for educators is somewhat brighter, we will still be hard pressed to come anywhere near the required number of teachers in the next 10 years by trying to hire solely within our ranks.

Education Minister Ed Picco and Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq are going to have to get awfully creative in attracting professionals to their respective departments for the next few years.

The GN believes the new system will encourage home ownership in Nunavut and has dreams of major condominium projects springing up across the territory.

Should that come to be, the vacated rental units would go a long way towards easing Nunavut's housing crisis, or so the theory goes.

That would be nice to see, but unless the GN is prepared to implement strict rent controls, these units would have to go down the road to public housing to be effective.

We have nothing against people making $90,000 and up per annum being asked to carry their fair share of the rental load.

In fact, for that alone we applaud the government.

As pointed out by Scott, there are still far too many people with high incomes in Nunavut who are able to take advantage of the current housing system.

But if the GN expects private landlords to give the average working person making less than $15 an hour in the retail sector a break in their rent, it will be in for a rude awakening.

The GN's new staff housing strategy is a good move for cleaning up its own house, saving about $23 million a year and increasing the number of beneficiaries working with the government.

However, unless we see a spike in public-housing units or some form of rent control initiated during the next few years, the strategy will do nothing to establish healthy communities outside of the capital.

And, while it may establish sustainable housing markets, those markets will remain far out of reach for the average working person trying to support their family on $30,000 a year in the Kivalliq.


Pipeline to government

Editorial Comment
Jason Unrau
Inuvik Drum


Attending the Twin Lakes MLA's constituency meeting last Thursday, I was reminded once again of how interesting it is to live in the Northwest Terrritories.

I mean, name another territory or province in the country where the deputy minister will listen to the plight of curlers in his or her constituency?

Credit must go out to Floyd Roland for listening patiently to their concerns before turning to more pressing matters, such as the state of pipeline negotiations between Imperial Oil and the aboriginal groups on the proposed right-of-way.

I've been scanning the various news items that have come in since the two forces came together in Calgary earlier this month and it started me thinking that at this year's career fair for secondary students, a consultant's booth should most definitely be included.

It's probably the most lucrative career choice out there these days and in relatively high demand in the NWT, what with all the high-level meetings taking place everywhere and giant pools of money brimming over for such endeavours.

And I'm not just talking about the pipeline.

Take, for instance, the new elementary school the government is planning to build in Inuvik.

The budget is $20 million with 12 per cent of that set aside for planning alone. That's roughly the same amount that early childhood education/daycare will have to throw into the pot if it wants space to operate from at the new school.

Granted, policies and procedures must be followed when spending from the public purse and gone are the days when the government would just come in, make a decision and throw up a building.

I suppose the updated version of government planning we find ourselves in these days is what's known as progress.

Enter the consultant. Earlier this year, Education, Culture and Employment dispatched one to these parts to get a bead on what people wanted in the new elementary school. Early childhood education amenities surely appeared on the list but alas, that kind of thing is not in the education ministry's mandate. "Softer toilet paper," (one student's suggestion) probably didn't make the minister's list, either.

Take solace in the fact that classrooms, a staff room, library and office space will indeed be included in a new school, thank goodness!

We wouldn't want our tax dollars going to waste on just any old consultancy exercise.

So the next time you hear of some consultant saying that the people's interests are in good hands or that they'll go to the wall to ensure the people get what they want, remember that the consultant's interests are already well in hand.

Because without a school or a pipeline to speak of, the only people bringing home the bacon on your behalf are the beloved consultants.

God bless them. Send in the lawyers!


Go solar

Editorial Comment
Andrew Raven
Deh Cho Drum


Climate change and mounting fossil fuel prices are two of the most challenging problems facing Northerners right now.

With that in mind, the territorial government has taken a $15,000 gamble on solar-power project in Jean Marie River.

Photo-voltaic cells, which convert sunlight into electrical energy, will be installed on the band office and one home in the 250-person community.

The government hopes the solar panels will help lower the tremendously high cost of generating electricity in Jean Marie River. Residents there pay 20 times what Calgarians do.

While the $15,000 may seem expensive, the return could be tremendous.

The diesel plants which supply most remote Northern settlements with power are inefficient and expensive to maintain.

Solar power could be the cost-effective solution to the territories' energy needs. Kudos to officials for some forward thinking.

The panels also have the added benefit of reducing greenhouse gasses, perhaps a happy coincidence for a government that supports the Mackenzie Valley gas pipeline.

Fort Providence is a great community, but it could be one of the unluckiest towns in the Northwest Territories.

Not only do residents have to contend with plagues of mosquitoes and black flies but also pests of the larger, hoofed variety: bison.

Nearly 75 animals marched through the Mackenzie River hamlet last week, happily grazing on lawns, knocking down fences and trampling flower beds.

The free-roaming bison have been a nuisance in Fort Providence for decades and some residents say the problem is getting worse.

They have called on the territorial government to intervene, but there are few options.

Building a fence is not practical. Few seem inclined to allow limited hunting around the town, which could re-instill a fear of humans in the animals.

The community has tried cutting the grass, but the beasts still find it appetizing.

The reality is simple: Fort Providence is smack dab in the middle of a sanctuary that is home to about 2,000 bison and the animals will probably be denting cars for years to come.

Faced with that inescapable reality, residents will have to remain vigilant to avoid accidents. That and buy a good hoe.