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Shelter will improve quality of life Yellowknifer - Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Slated to open as a pilot project this fall, the shelter is an obvious answer to numerous problems the city is faced with on a routine basis. A lack of public washrooms tops the list. Providing shelter to those without means may also keep homeless away from factors that contribute to their predicament and make the city unsafe and costly to police - namely alcoholism and drug abuse. Details of what the shelter will offer in terms of programs and services are not yet known. However funding lined up for the facility, amounting to more than $550,000 over the next three years, indicates that it has great potential. Contributors to the project include Health and Social Services, providing $375,00, BHP Billiton, providing $150,000, and the city. BHP Billiton in particular must be applauded for conceiving the project early last year. Thankfully, the mining company recognizes that it is a key player in not only the development of the North, but in the well-being of our citizens. The city's vitality relies heavily on the diamond mines, which encourage private investment in the capital. As a private enterprise that reaps tremendous profits from the territory, BHP is showing that it is prepared to give back, and leave a positive legacy that may last beyond the lifetime of its mining operations. Fortunately the city and territorial government are following their lead by providing this project with the funds it needs, to help make Yellowknife a city that is safe, where all - including those struggling in life - have a better chance to stay out of trouble.
Sure-fire risk Wednesday, June 3, 2009 When a student at Mildred Hall School was shot in the back of the head by a peer with a pellet gun on May 22, it raised serious questions about pellet and replica gun regulation. Following the Mildred Hall incident, and last year's arrest of four students near St. Pat's with replica guns, it's time for the City of Yellowknife to take matters into its own hands and pass a bylaw. If this city can have drug-free zones (which fall under the Criminal Code), it can certainly have gun-free zones, even if the guns aren't considered powerful firearms. A police takedown of those carrying guns that look authentic or the possibility that someone gets shot in the eye means these weapons still pose a serious danger. To prevent misuse of pellet guns, retailers say they don't sell them to people younger than 18. Yet somehow, at Mildred Hall School, a child had possession of a pellet gun in a schoolyard without parental supervision. At the very least, schools should take action by banning replica and pellet guns on their grounds. Parents must ensure if their kids are allowed to use the weapons, they are using them responsibly for activities such as supervised target shooting, in a safe environment, well outside the bounds of places of learning.
The heart of the matter Editorial Comment Darrell Greer Kivalliq News - Wednesday, June 3, 2009 I have the highest praise for 95 per cent of Gov. Gen. Michaelle Jean's visit to Rankin Inlet this past month. She was eloquent without being presumptuous, warm, engaging and sincere. And, she made an incredible impact on hundreds of our youth in a very short period of time. That being said, with her experience in the limelight, anyone who believes she truly didn't realize to what extreme the southern media would manipulate the way in which she tried a piece of seal heart is a fool, plain and simple. What angers me most about Jean's decision, is the fact there was precious little mention in any southern media about any of the positives Jean accomplished during her short stay. You read, saw or heard nothing in southern outlets about how enamoured we here in Rankin were with her Excellency. More important, you heard or read precious little about the positive impact she had on our students while Nunavut struggles with a drop-out rate of about 75 per cent. Nor did you hear about her youth initiatives, or what she hopes to see in the field of educational development in our territory. Instead, we were bombarded with fanatical comments from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and other similarly-minded organizations, and had to endure comic-book praise from capital hill referring to her as the new Braveheart. We give full credit to Rankin Mayor John Hickes for telling southern media to take it somewhere else if they're looking for sensationalism. We also give full marks to Kivalliq Inuit Association president Jose Kusugak for blasting the National Post for its use of a picture from the East Coast seal hunt in its story on Jean's culinary treat. This wasn't about Inuit culture or tradition. We all know the importance of the seal to Nunavut, and we wish people outside the North would get it through their thick heads how vastly different the situation here is from the East Coast. In a perfect world, Inuit sharing a piece of their culture with a visiting dignitary would be a good thing. But this isn't a perfect world and Jean's performance wasn't about nurturing solidarity between Canadians. Surely the Governor General realized the zealots would never view it as such. They took it exactly as it was intended – as a political statement. Unfortunately it came from a person in an apolitical position who shouldn't be making such statements, despite her contentions to the contrary after the fact. Having a documentary filmmaker as part of the visiting entourage raises additional red flags as to the true purpose behind the display. Inuit have to protect their culture, tradition, values and way of life fiercely if these attributes are to survive. But, we here in the North also have to better understand the nature of the southern beast and be smarter in how our ways are portrayed, no matter how warm the smile doing the asking. For in this age of professional protesters and if-it-bleeds-it-leads media, that is the true heart of the matter.
War and peace NWT News/North - Monday, June 1, 2009 Peacekeeping has been part of the Canadian identity since former Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson established the concept through the United Nations in 1956 while he was the minister of foreign affairs. When it comes to its military identity, Canada has lost its way. But Canada's role in keeping the peace has been diminishing since the 1990s when our country's peacekeeping contribution plunged from 1,110 in 1991 to a little more than 50 troops in 2006, according to the Council of Canadians, a citizens' group. The war in Afghanistan has further changed the face of the Canadian military. Last month, additional evidence of Canada's abandonment of its role as a peacekeeping nation came via a senate report recommending increased militarization of the Canadian Rangers. The Northern Patrol group is the Canadian Forces' eyes and ears in the Arctic. Historically, the Rangers have comprised primarily Inuit and First Nations people who have used their skills and knowledge of the land to assist in search rescue efforts and guide and train military personnel in the North. The Rangers derive a deep sense of pride from sharing those traditional skills and the knowledge they are serving their country. However, many of them have no desire to engage in combat situations. Whereas Nunavut's Liberal Senator Willie Adams says the change could provide more jobs for Inuit; we must agree with Western Arctic MP Dennis Bevington who said militarization of the Rangers is the wrong approach to enhancing Arctic sovereignty. If the Conservative government is serious about Arctic sovereignty it will establish roads and ports and further invest in Northern people. It's time for Canada to reaffirm itself as a nation that encourages peace instead of war and stands up for freedom with words instead of bullets. In the words of Pearson, one of Canada's most noble leaders, "the best defence of peace is not power, but the removal of the causes of war."
A lesson to all NWT News/North - Monday, June 1, 2009 Alice Mawdsley stood before her fellow graduates in Fort Smith as valedictorian of the class of 2009. It was against all odds that Mawdsley graduated this year. She survived a serious head injury and numerous surgeries following a recreational vehicle accident. Following a prolonged coma she had to relearn to speak and walk. Another youth was charged with operating a motor vehicle while impaired by alcohol in relation to the incident. Mawdsley is a testament to the strength of human spirit. But she is also a reminder of how quickly a life can change or end, especially without a helmet. While we congratulate and celebrate Mawdsley's recovery, we urge the youth of the NWT to learn from the close call that nearly ended the young student's life. Not everyone gets a second chance.
Liquor restrictions work Nunavut News/North - Monday, June 1, 2009 In last week's Nunavut News/North, we reported Kugluktuk has realized a 30 per cent drop in crime and a 38 per cent drop in arrests in the year or so since it established an alcohol education committee. The results are a dramatic example of the link between liquor and crime. In November 2003, 57 per cent of voters in a plebiscite in Kugluktuk had said "no" to an alcohol committee. But in the summer of 2007, the RCMP got a one-month alcohol ban to lessen their workload while renovations were carried out on the police detachment building. In the two weeks before the ban was put in place at the end of June, there were 59 people taken into custody. Only three people were arrested during the month-long ban. In the two weeks after the ban was lifted at the end of July, 36 people were arrested, 12 people were taken into custody under the Mental Health Act and two people committed suicide. In the plebiscite in October of that year, 66 per cent of voters said yes to establishing an alcohol committee, which would have the power to approve or deny applications to bring in liquor. Creating an alcohol committee is a compromise between a complete ban and total liberty. People without recent liquor offence charges are allowed to bring in reasonable amounts of alcohol for personal consumption. Those who have been in recent trouble with the law due to their alcohol consumption are out of luck. As with any committee, its decisions don't please everyone. In one case, by the time a permit application was processed, the wedding reception the alcohol had been ordered for had already taken place. Some have complained about their orders being reduced without notice, or the fact that the committee stopped processing permits three days before a spring alcohol ban took effect last year. Perhaps the committees still have a few kinks to work out, but they have proven their worth. Some will argue that establishing alcohol education committees simply increases bootlegging. We would refer those individuals to the crime statistics from Kugluktuk, cited above. If bootlegging does rise, it's up to community members to band together and report it to the police. When abused, liquor can tear the fabric of communities apart, resulting in missed days of work and school, fetal alcohol syndrome, broken relationships, absent parents and lost lives. Of course, people have done evil things without touching a drop of alcohol. But it would be safe to say the vast majority of Nunavut's acts of vandalism, thefts, robberies, arsons, harassment, threats, assaults, sexual assaults, aggravated assaults, suicide, manslaughters and murders stem from the abuse of alcohol. Anything that prevents violence and deaths, helps people feel safe in their own communities again is well worth doing.
Top education sells Yellowknifer - Friday, May 29, 2009
Last week, it was revealed that tax support among Yellowknife ratepayers has shifted four per cent from the Catholic district to public schools since 2006, the year the Catholic board began its attempt to prevent non-Catholic trustees from running for election to the school board. The board went on a rampage after discovering its lone non-Catholic trustee, Amy Hacala, had a Web blog page where she condoned abortion and criticized those who believe in God. Those certainly aren't very Catholic views, but the Catholic board has never had a problem accepting non-Catholic students, which make up 40 per cent of the student body. Let's remember that some parents don't send their kids to Catholic schools because they want to them to convert to Catholicism; they send them there because they believe Yellowknife Catholic Schools provides a superior education and school environment. Board chair Mary Vane suggests the fire at St. Joseph school is what led to the exodus of tax support, but this is questionable logic. One would think ratepayers supportive of the Catholic school board would rally behind the district after such an unfortunate incident. It would seem more likely, as the board keeps digging deeper into its dogmatic bunker, while shopping their failing lawsuit from one court venue to the next, that some non-idealogical ratepayers who've supported the Catholic district in the past are offended by the board's discriminatory zeal. Top education sells, not divisive attempts to weed out the non-believers on the Catholic school board.
Hazardous waste put in its place Yellowknifer - Friday, May 29, 2009 City council made clear this week that a clean environment will remain a priority for Yellowknifers for years to come. Councillors approved a proposed waste transfer facility, whose function will be to make it easier to dispose of toxic and hazardous materials within Yellowknife and throughout the territory. To be built in the Kam Lake area, the facility will take on industrial and commercial waste - primarily from NWT diamond mines and exploration camps. The plant may eventually take on household wastes as well, according to John Oldfield, owner of Kavanaugh Bros. Ltd., builders of the facility. This would give residents an option in addition to the city's collection days, allowing them to be rid of toxic products more quickly. That's less time for the toxic substances to sit in people's sheds and garages - spills waiting to happen. It also makes it less likely that people will resort to illegally dumping hazardous waste in out-of-the-way places, like in the woods skirting the city. The waste transfer facility also highlights the need to develop local industry, rather than rely on southern operations to service the territory. The North requires solutions suited to the region, and local companies are best suited to this.
An 800-kilogram opportunity Editorial Comment Roxanna Thompson Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, May 28, 2009
I'd just moved to Fort Simpson and within the first two weeks I took a trip south to Fort Liard. As I was driving around the hamlet's streets I spotted them.
There were three bison standing in an empty lot beside a house looking for grass under the snow. They were huge and had a dusting of snow on their dark brown coats. I stopped and took a picture. My initial reaction is apparently not uncommon. "They're really cute animals the first few times until you start receiving damage," said Al Harris, a long-term resident of the hamlet. Harris was one of the people who attended a meeting the Department of Environment and Natural Resources held on bison. Instead of waiting to hear a summary of the draft Wood Bison Management Strategy for the NWT, the original reason for the meeting, residents moved straight into discussing the problems that bison cause. The novelty of sharing your community with the largest land mammal in North America soon wears off. The animals, which can weigh over 800 kg, have a habit of damaging lawns, trees, gardens, fences and vehicles. The bison are just doing what comes naturally to them, but residents at the meeting were quite clear: they don't want bison in Fort Liard. They can wander around in the surrounding woods but they aren't welcomed in the community. No one can blame them for feeling this way and many residents of Nahanni Butte and Fort Providence, two other bison afflicted communities, feel the same. Residents realize, however, there's no getting around the fact that the bison are back to stay but they also know who reintroduced them and, therefore, who should be responsible for them. The territorial government, namely the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (ENR), has been addressing the bison issues, as the management strategy illustrates, but more action and less talk is what's called for. In Fort Liard, participants in the meeting complained that they keep giving ENR staff the same message, deal with the bison, but see little in response. For their part ENR staff counter that they are taking active measures, like herding bison out of the hamlet, but it's not that simple because the animals keep coming back. The Fort Liard meeting produced two suggested measures, electric fences and hazing teams, which both sides, to some degree, agreed to. Stephen Charlie, the regional superintendent for ENR said before staff can move on these initiatives permission has to come from headquarters. The ENR departmental heads in Yellowknife need to stamp their approval on this and fast to prove that they're serious about managing wood bison and including communities in the plan. Electric fences and teams that use quads to herd bison out of Fort Liard won't completely solve the problem, but they will go a long way towards addressing concerns that have been put on the back burner for too long.
Where were the cabinet ministers? Editorial Comment Andrew Rankin Inuvik Drum - Thursday, May 28, 2009 But at the ones I did attend, I wondered where some of our more prominent cabinet ministers might be. Rather than jumping to conclusions, I thought maybe it was just a coincidence that at the sessions I sat in on, ministers such as Sandy Lee (Minister of Health), Jackson Lafferty (Minister of Justice and Education, Culture and Employment) and deputy premier Michael Miltenberger (Minister of Finance and Environment and Natural Resources) were nowhere to be seen. But my suspicions were confirmed during a conversation earlier this week with Mayor Derek Lindsay. They didn't show up. Understandably he was ticked off that several cabinet ministers didn't make the trip to consult with community leaders about their concerns and their constituents'. It's hard not to side with the mayor, especially when you have community leaders from across the North gathered in one spot. Even Western Arctic MP Dennis Bevington showed up. Considering the cost of travel to outlying communities, doesn't it make good financial sense for the government to take advantage of such an opportunity? What could be a better time, especially when many of the resolutions and priorities coming out of the meeting centred on territorial issues such as electricity rates and board amalgamations? Premier Floyd Roland and Robert McLeod, Minister of Municipal and Community Affairs, were in attendance. Good for them. But given that they're our local MLAs, did they really have much of a choice? Nobody will force MLAs and cabinet ministers to attend these once-a-year meetings, and ones similar to them, but you can't fault people for being annoyed at the lack of territorial government representation at them. Especially when you consider all the opposition residents recently made against the government's ideas of board amalgamation and the proposed changes to the NWT Health Care Plan. Many of those residents said all along their government wasn't consulting its people. And then it was reported in the May 18 edition of News/North that our government spent $54,191 to send a group of five of its own to Denmark, Finland and Sweden. The article goes on to list many other expensive business travel tabs, compliments of our MLAs. Why shouldn't taxpayers raise an eyebrow? Isn't your own backyard more important than foreign pastures, especially when you consider the importance of last weekend's AGM? MLAs are accountable to the people who elect them and our government does pride itself on the principle of consensus. Maybe it's not the end of the world that many of our ministers didn't visit Inuvik last weekend, but it certainly provides a pause for thought. |