Features

  • News Desk
  • News Briefs
  • News Summaries
  • Columnists
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Arctic arts
  • Readers comment
  • Find a job
  • Tenders
  • Classifieds
  • Subscriptions
  • Market reports
  • Northern mining
  • Oil & Gas
  • Handy Links
  • Construction (PDF)
  • Opportunities North
  • Best of Bush
  • Tourism guides
  • Obituaries
  • Feature Issues
  • Advertising
  • Contacts
  • Archives
  • Today's weather
  • Leave a message


    NNSL Photo/Graphic

  • NNSL Logo .
    Home page text size buttonsbigger textsmall text Text size Email this articleE-mail this page

    Saving lives one boat trip at a time

    Brodie Thomas
    Northern News Services
    Published Monday, September 1, 2008

    LLI GOLINE/NORMAN WELLS - A life-jacket loaner program is making waves on the Mackenzie River and may soon be reproduced in other Northern communities.

    The program started when Norman Wells resident Dolly Pierrot was speaking with Sgt. Donna Rorrison in the summer of 2006. It was shortly after a tragic boating accident near Fort Good Hope.

    NNSL Photo/Graphic

    Dave Parlee, left, and Dolly Pierrot proudly stand by a completed life-jacket kiosk tree. The life-jackets are free to borrow at three Sahtu communities on the Mackenzie River. Each life-jacket has the name of a drowning victim on a tag. By wearing the jacket, you are honoring the memory of the accident victim. - photo courtesy of Dolly

    '"We sat down and we were discussing ways to encourage people to wear life-jackets while travelling by boat on the Mackenzie River," said Pierrot.

    They decided to start a program that would make the life-jackets freely available at the dock.

    While the idea of making free life-jackets available is nothing new, Pierrot and Rorrison decided to make the project more personal by putting the names of drowning victims on the life-jackets.

    "We just took it a step further in personalizing them, just thinking that people would really respect loved ones that had drowned and use the life-jackets in memory of them," said Pierrot.

    They began by getting permission from family members of drowning victims to use the names of their loved ones on the jackets.

    Once the idea was in place, Rorrison enlisted the help of Tulita resident Dave Parlee, who now works as Tulita's bylaw officer and has many contacts throughout the NWT. Within days he had contacted friends at companies around the North and had them making contributions of time, money and materials.

    In order for the program to work, life-jackets had to be displayed at the boat launches. Parlee had some friends with welding skills create "kiosk trees" out of scrap metal.

    "Sahtu Helicopters was kind enough to fly the completed trees to Tulita and Fort Good Hope. They used it as a training exercise for their new pilots. It was a perfect sling operation for them," said Parlee.

    There are now memorial life-jackets in Tulita, Norman Wells, and Fort Good Hope. Pierrot said 60 life-jackets were purchased, 20 for each community. At the end of the 2007 boating season, all 60 life-jackets were returned. There are plans to purchase more jackets for the 2009 season.

    Pierrot said it is not unusual to find life-jackets from one community turning up on another community's tree kiosk. She said as long as they are available for the next person, she's not concerned which community they end up in.

    She said the program is taking on a life of its own. There are plans to build a life-jacket tree for Jackfish Lake, a popular recreation spot just outside of Norman Wells.

    "I did get a call from Deline and they're interested in starting a life-jacket tree program over there," she said.

    Both Pierrot and Parlee feel that having names on the jackets made this program a success.

    Pierrot said he was at the boat launch in Fort Good Hope one day when someone returned to the dock and threw his jacket on the ground.

    "There was a young fellow there who saw this happen. He said 'Hey, that's named after my granddad. You pick that up,'" said Parlee.

    The person picked up the life-jacket and apologized.