Go back

Features


Editorial
Northern News Services Online


Friday, January 4, 2008
Put lawsuit award towards 911

Bravo to James Anderson for taking on Bell Mobility with a class-action lawsuit to recoup monthly fees charged by the company for non-existent 911 service.

These kind of lawsuits are rare in this country. It's bound to take up a lot of Anderson's time and money, and there is no guarantee he will succeed.

Bell charges its northern cell phone customers 75 cents a month for 911 emergency calls even though the territory, or at least Yellowknife, is months away from being able to access it.

This latest saga involving Bell, or its subsidiary NMI Mobility, isn't the first time customers have been left in the lurch.

In 2006, customers across the North endured several days of unexpected disruptions as Bell upgraded its services for Internet capability. It was only after scores of complaints and media coverage when the glitch was finally explained.

The year before, Bell told customers it was their responsibility to check their bills for errors after long distance charges were applied to a new local prefix 445.

Now they're being sued for $6 million for charging for a service that no Northerner can access unless they're down south.

According to Anderson's lawyer Landy Marr, if successful, the award would be split between all Bell cell phone customers in the country who are without access to 911 service.

Individual payments, obviously, would not amount to much -- $9 for each year customers have had to pay for it.

Perhaps this is one area where Anderson can continue to apply his communal approach.

Considering that individual customers stand to benefit little from a successful lawsuit, other than the satisfaction at having a token sum returned to them, perhaps NWT customers wouldn't mind putting the money towards a 911 service for the Territories.

Yellowknife doesn't have a 911 service because the city and territorial government can't agree on who should pay for it.

The territorial government won't commit any money unless such a service covers all NWT communities.

It would seem ridiculous that Bell cell phone users would have to make the first move but perhaps such a gesture would get the ball rolling at city hall and the legislative assembly.

In any event, they would at least be able to claim they're paying for a service that actually exists.


Promises to be fulfilled
Editorial Comment
Roxanna Thompson
Deh Cho Drum
Thursday, January 03, 2008

For the Deh Cho, the year was both one of fulfilled goals and unrequited dreams.

Sitting in the near victory category are the Nahanni Butte gymnasium, the Mackenzie Bridge, the Nahanni National Park Reserve and the Wrigley RCMP detachment.

Nahanni Butte, the only community in the Deh Cho that doesn't have a gymnasium, has been promised that one will be constructed in the next year. This will be a boon for the community, allowing residents greater access to recreational activities and a larger space to gather indoors.

Also on the promised, but not constructed category, is the bridge across the Mackenzie River at Fort Providence.

The bridge has been a long term goal for many residents in Fort Providence and farther afield. Some close calls in past years led to high hopes that were dashed. This time, however, it looks as if the project will actually be moving forward.

On Aug. 15 at the legislative assembly, Premier Joe Handley announced that the bridge project would proceed.

Also expected to move ahead soon is the expansion of the Nahanni National Park Reserve.

The importance of the project on both a local and national level was enough to warrant a visit from Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Aug. 8. Harper announced the expansion of the park, and work has begun to determine the actual boundaries. This process is sure to make headlines in the new year as it moves forward.

Also clinging on the edge of the victory list is the promise of a Wrigley RCMP detachment.

In May, the territorial government approved funding for Wrigley, Gameti and Sachs Harbour to each receive two RCMP officers. There's been no sign of the officers, yet.

Although these four big-ticket items constitute quite an accomplishment for the Deh Cho, there are still some areas where there's been little visible progress.

At the beginning of the year the Dehcho Process, the Dehcho Land Use Plan and the Mackenzie Gas Project each showed promise for being hot topics to keep your eyes on. This initial promise hasn't panned out.

What little news that has come out of these projects has told of negotiations and hearings that are underway and the fact that it may be awhile before any decisions are made. It's hard to say if more positive news will be forthcoming for any of these projects in the new year. They are still, however, things to be aware of.


Best foot forward
Editorial Comment
Dez Loreen
Inuvik News
Thursday, January 03, 2008

We've come a long way, baby. Inuvik is officially celebrating its 50th anniversary this year and we can all pitch in to make it the best party possible.

From what I have gathered, every event here in town will be beefed up for the big year. It looks like the first of our annual gatherings is the Sunrise festival.

Twenty-one years of fireworks in the North. I can only imagine the excitement and hype that surrounded the event in its infancy. Now, more than two decades later, we still round up the family and brave the cold. For those of you who were born here and have seen the community grow, it must be a significant year indeed.

To those who are new to Inuvik, you might not be aware of it, but you're a fortunate person. As deputy mayor Chris Larocque said earlier in 2007; It's God's country.

Everyone knows that you put your best foot forward and dress up nice and fancy like for a big party. Well, this is our big gala.

Time to show up in top form and impress the masses. If we're going to make a big stink out of this and call attention to ourselves, then we should all be ready for the spotlight.

The streets are cleaner than ever before, and besides the fact that we didn't ask for the big blue dumpsters, we seem to be using them.

Social programs are still in need, but now the issue is on the front line. Treatment centres and safe houses will soon be a reality and we can thank each other for those advances.

If Inuvik is truly to remain the hub of the Mackenzie Delta and Beaufort, we need to keep pushing for more. Why don't we have a highway connecting us to Yellowknife yet? Aren't we worthy of some southern hospitality?

Our athletes are making sure that we stay in the highest rankings of the North as well. From pellet gun-toting cadets to 40-year-old hockey champions, we are among the most gifted this side of Great Slave Lake.

Has anyone been in the Midnight Sun Recreation Complex lately? That place is bangin'!

The kitchen is fully operational and has some pretty good burgers too, may I add. The hockey rink is always in use, as is the curling area.

Our conference centre and community hall is now set up with wireless internet, so if you're in the area and want to surf the web on your handheld, feel free.

The family centre pool and squash courts are just as popular as ever. Maybe it's the rush of the holiday season, or the fact that I haven't had a drink in two weeks, but this feels like the best possible way to start a new year.

I made a vow to live a healthier life and I can see that others around me have, too. Staying strong and happy is part of being a safe community.

By working together we can improve the lives of those around us. So get outside, volunteer with a local cause, or just spend some time with the people who live around you.

If this last month taught me anything, it's that 50-years-old is supposed to be a time of maturity and dignity. The people who made this community (no not the government, I mean the people) wanted the most for the North.

Now a lot of those people have moved on, this is our time to bring Inuvik higher than ever imagined.

I don't know about all of you, but I plan on making this my home for years to come.

These are the stories we will be telling others about for years to come.


The Dangerfields of sports
Editorial Comment
Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News
Wednesday, January 2, 2008

I've been disappointed with the political animal the Arctic Winter Games have become since peewee hockey was dropped from its lineup two Games ago.

The reason given was that the Games had grown too big and expensive to host, so something had to go.

Hockey, because of the size of the teams, was an easy target.

And - even though it was the least competitive of the four brackets of hockey offered at the time - in this age of political correctness at any cost, female hockey wasn't going to be tampered with.

That left the group of kids who, arguably, best exemplified the true spirit of the Arctic Winter Games to be cut from the lineup.

Of course cost hasn't made much of a dent in the number of bureaucrats who get to make the trek to the site of the Games every two years.

In fact, in most areas, it's reached the point where attending the Games has become an expected perk for many who dwell in their government's ivory tower.

Forget the fact a good percentage of these decision makers contribute absolutely nothing to the development and organization of amateur sports in their communities.

Their departments sign the cheques that help fund the Games and, apparently, that's far more important than the volunteers who give so much of themselves to keep the various sporting programs alive and well in the North.

It's funny how signing a cheque to help fund the Games and showcase the talents of our young athletes isn't expected, but a free trip for the bureaucrats wanting to attend is, but I digress.

A number of the areas attending the 2008 Games in Yellowknife announced they couldn't find room on their charters for officials because they were filled with athletes, coaches, mission staff and, yup, bureaucrats.

This puts the expense on the host society to get the officials to the Games, either by donated seats or footing the bill directly.

Officials who volunteer for the event are given the option of providing their own transportation.

So, let's see: week away from work, pay and family to officiate a premier event that you don't get paid to attend while incurring personal costs of more than $1,000.

Gee, we can't understand why more officials don't jump at that.

Also staggering can be the number of officials who have to bow out of the event because they can't get the time away from work.

Their bosses see no need to reward an employee with a week away from work without pay for being so active in the community.

No need to recognize the accomplishments of those who have reached the pinnacle of officiating in the North, while putting in countless hours to make sports a healthy, safe and fair environment for kids to compete in - many of them the sons, daughters, nieces, nephews and grandchildren of the same bosses who say no.

That just doesn't compare with those who have their paycheques signed by territorial or provincial governments, right?

Is it any wonder it can be so difficult getting people to officiate in the North and rural areas?

They've truly become the Rodney Dangerfields of sports - they get no respect!