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Business exodus threatens 50 Street
Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The exodus of businesses from the Centre Square Mall seems unstoppable.

Last week, Yellowknifer reported that two more retailers are moving to more desirable places that are "hopefully clean," in the words of Headgear owner Dan Hayward, and where "it's going to be easier for people to get in," in the words of Barren Land Jewellery owner Bonnie Humphries.

Commenting on the Bank of Montreal's recent relocation uptown, one bank employee expressed relief that their new Frame Lake location is a lot nicer, and "the area smells better."

Walking to work at the bank's old location in the mall, according to employee Tiffany Robinson "was kind of scary some mornings."

Clearly, too little is being done to clean up 50 Street and ensure Centre Square Mall is attractive to customers and visitors.

Businesses are repelled from it, first and foremost by the uncleanliness, public intoxication and violent incidents on the street, and secondly, by the mall's inaccessibility for strollers and wheelchairs.

It is in the mall's interests to ensure its building, which takes up an entire block of 50 Street, is attractive and accessible.

The city has the same interests and must insist the mall follow through on promises to build an access ramp for strollers and wheelchairs and help rejuvenate the streetscape.

Until this is done, 50 Street is in danger of stagnating further, damaging the remaining retailers and the city's reputation.


When Catholic schools were king
Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Not too long ago scarcely a discouraging word was ever heard concerning the Yellowknife Catholic board.

Enrolment was rising, the budget books were healthy, parents and students raved about the district's programs and facilities.

A lot of that happened under Kern Von Hagen's watch, the superintendent from 1999 to 2008, but many would argue the catalyst for the district's good fortune was his predecessor, Dr. Loretta Foley.

The school district recently re-named Weledeh Catholic School's library in Foley's honour.

She was instrumental in getting the new Weledeh school built and convinced city council to contribute $9.2 million for its construction with the promise of opening up its shared gym space with St. Patrick's School to other public activities.

It was a very politically savvy move that's still paying off to this day.

Foley is also widely acknowledged for the emphasis she put on academic excellence during her ten years as superintendent.

What a difference from the last few years where the focus of the district has been excluding non-Catholics from the school board.

Hopefully new superintendent Claudia Parker takes her inspiration from Foley and not fall into the trap Von Hagen found himself in during his last few years as superintendent under the zealous leadership of former Catholic school board chair Shannon Gullberg.

Parents and students would be happier for it and district schools can renew the focus on quality of education.


A promise never to forget
Editorial Comment
Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, November 11, 2009

I never met my Uncle Bill.

He, my dad, Rufus, and Uncle Roy were the three Greer brothers from Round Island, Cape Breton, who answered the call to arms in the Second World War.

My dad and Uncle Roy came home - Bill did not.

Answering the call was expected in the Greer family, as the father, Arthur Greer, was a cavalry officer in the First World War and believed one always had to do their duty.

He felt that way until the news of Bill's death.

Although he never spoke it, most of the family felt his feelings may have changed a bit after that.

Bill always seemed to be favoured among his children, if, indeed, a father does favour one above the others.

Bill was 23 years old on April 3, 1945, just a month before the Second World War would come to an end.

A warrant officer (2nd class), he was a wireless operator/air gunner with the Royal Canadian Air Force's 162 bombing and reconnaissance squadron.

His crew hadn't seen much action in the previous months and everyone knew the end of the war was imminent.

April 3, 1945, was a brilliantly sunny day as Bill's plane taxied down the runway for a routine reconnaissance flight over a section of the Atlantic where U-boat activity was still being reported.

Banter on the aircraft was light, as the crew members talked on the radio about their plans after returning home.

The good-natured ribbing and idle musing over what the future may hold grew quiet as the plane reached its destination.

They had seen nothing but water when the pilot decided to descend a little lower for one last look before heading back to base.

Had the sunlight's glare on the water not been so blinding, they most certainly would have seen the German crew scrambling around the U-boat's deck gun as it rested on top of the waves.

Bill may have thought how strange it was to hear thunder on a clear day before a flash of brilliance turned his world dark forever.

As I look up at the poppy I keep on my calendar year-round for my uncle, I wonder what it would have been like to know him.

I know he was mechanically inclined in his youth, and an articulate young man, but not much else.

I often find it strange to feel as if I truly miss someone I'd never met.

Someone, in fact, who gave his life for his country 13 years before I was even born.

But, every year at this time, the feeling returns and a dark cloak of sadness envelops my spirit.

There is nothing I can do to change the fact I will never meet Uncle Bill, at least not as a mortal man.

But I can always remember he was here, and part of my family.

And, I can always remember he was one of the heroes who gave their lives so we can enjoy the freedom we have today.

There's comfort in knowing as long as we remember, their sacrifice will always mean as much as it did more than six decades ago.

And I promise Uncle Bill, again today, I will never forget.


Turning a blind eye
NWT News/North - Monday, November 9, 2009

Testimony at Christopher Worden's murder trial is shining the light back on a disturbing fact from the night that Emrah Bulatci shot and killed the RCMP officer.

Multiple witnesses who have testified said they heard the shots that ended Worden's life. Two witnesses testified to actually seeing the shooting. What they all share in common is a failure to act.

Why did no one call the police? One witness testified to returning to bed after hearing the shots, while the person who was at the scene walked away.

Approximately three hours later Worden's lifeless body was discovered.

Although it can't be said definitively whether finding Worden sooner would have saved his life, time is always of the essence in an emergency situation.

Every day police risk their lives in the service of the community. Even routine traffic stops have been known to come to tragic ends.

When Worden responded to a call on Oct. 6, 2007 it seemed routine, he went alone, and then things went bad.

Although the police are the wardens of our towns, cities and villages they are not the frontline of community safety, contrary to popular belief.

That duty belongs to the citizens. Each person in a community is equally responsible for ensuring public safety.

When we fail to report suspicious activity, or turn a blind eye to a known drug dealer, we assist in the degradation of neighbourhood values and allow seeds of crime to take root.

Worden was dedicated to protecting the community of Hay River. It's most unfortunate when he needed someone to look out for him, they walked away or went back to bed.


Fort Smith couple lucky to be alive
NWT News/North - Monday, November 9, 2009

Fort Smith came close to mourning the deaths of a local couple earlier this month. A man and woman were sound asleep as their home went up in flames.

If it were not for a neighbour and two passersby, the couple may have succumbed to heat and smoke as the 2 a.m, blaze consumed the home.

The fire began as a simple accident. The fire department suspects ashes from a woodstove disposed of improperly smoldered and then began to burn.

It's an accident that could happen to anyone. But, the couple lay asleep unprotected.

The fire department said the couple did not have a smoke detector to warn them of the deadly threat that raged in the other room.

Valerie Norwegian, Ann Beaudriault and Shirley Hehn's quick thinking saved two lives and they should be commended.

This should also be a lesson to everyone that smoke detectors are vital to personal safety and there is no excuse for not having one.


Let us be
Nunavut News/North - Monday, November 9, 2009

Somebody please explain to us why Americans, Europeans and even our own federal government think they know so much about wildlife in Nunavut?

Within the U.S. government there is a movement afoot to end all polar bear trade worldwide. Some Americans are convinced polar bears are an endangered species, threatened by climate change. The U.S. had already imposed a ban on the importation of polar bear hides as of last year. That has hurt Inuit hunting guides, who relied on American clients for sport hunts.

Now, it seems, the U.S. wants to bankrupt Inuit guides by shutting down the world market all together.

That's despite the fact that Western science has proven again and again that Inuit are right in their assessment of wildlife. For example, a Government of Nunavut population survey in the Davis Strait from 2005 to 2007 showed more than 2,100 bears, a much higher number than many in the scientific community suspected. Yet lifelong residents of Pangnirtung, Iqaluit and Kimmirut had been reporting a growing number of bears for years.

It just seems nobody listens to them.

The Nunavut Wildlife Management Board is looking at increasing the quota from 46 bears, taking the opinion of Nunavummiut into consideration. Those bears are also hunted by hunters from Nunavik, so working co-operatively with Inuit from Northern Quebec, as Nunavut recently agreed to do with Greenland for Baffin Bay and Kane Basin bears, would be further proof that the bigger picture will remain in focus.

A similar scenario played out last year when the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) had to eat some humble pie and revise its estimate of bowhead whale numbers in Eastern Arctic waters. Clinging to its 1996 calculation of 345 bowhead whales for many years, the DFO would only permit Inuit to hunt one bowhead every second year. The department turned a deaf ear to Inuit harvesters who insisted they were seeing more and more of the whales. Then, in 2008, officials from the federal fisheries department had to swallow hard and admit that their latest estimates pegged the whale population at 14,000 or more - a number that proved their previous estimates had clearly been wrong.

Nearly 30 years earlier, government wildlife experts were sounding the alarm bells over the Qamanirjuaq caribou herd in the Kivalliq region. Biologists were confident the animals had plummeted to fewer than 40,000. Predicting extinction unless severe action was taken, the government's wildlife experts called for strict quotas on hunting the caribou, going against Inuit observations that the herd was actually increasing in number. The next survey, in the late 1980s, showed the herd actually stood at nearly 220,000.

This shows that the Inuit haven't even been able to get respect from their own government when it comes to wildlife.

At least the Canadian government went to the World Trade Organization earlier this month to fight a European Union ban on seal products.

Many Europeans argue the seal hunt is inhumane and continue to evoke images of baby whitecoat seals being bludgeoned by clubs and hakapiks, which isn't representational of the Inuit hunt.

It's about time the federal government began to take action on behalf of the Inuit when it comes to wildlife issues. Our politicians in Nunavut and in Ottawa will have to take just as firm a stance against the U.S. in its misguided approach to squash the polar bear hunt.


Working for the money
Yellowknifer - Friday, November 6, 2009

A group of seniors recently turned to the territorial government to provide them with $50,000 needed to send their team to the 2010 Canada 55+ Games in Ontario.Services for seniors are covered by the Department of Health and Social Services.

Earlier this year the department backed away from proposed changes to health benefits under a storm of protest by seniors.

More recently, Health Minister Sandy Lee weathered an appeal by two MLAs in the legislative assembly to provide $50,000 to send a group of senior athletes to compete in Ontario next year. Lee replied that such funding is not in Health and Social Services' mandate.

Yellowknifers should know well that our cash-strapped government is always struggling to meet the enormous demands placed on the health budget, many of them relating to critical care.

The senior athletes should instead follow the example set by youth groups and other sports groups in the city, and raise the funds for themselves.

Youth of the city are told time and again that any given program's success is dependent on fundraising efforts, not hand-outs. This is a good chance for our elder athletes, particularly the well-to-do, to demonstrate this advice works by putting it into practice.


Lakes forbidden for a purpose
Friday, November 6, 2009

It's nice to know the deepwater sculpin is alive and well in Alexie Lake.

That was re-confirmed in 2004, the year Alexie and neighbouring Chitty Lake were closed to recreational fishing and returned to their previous designation as a study preserve for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

While the seldom seen sculpin may not excite much interest in most people, it does play a role in advancing the scientific knowledge towards Canadian Shield lakes – of which, there are many around Yellowknife and throughout the North.

The deepwater sculpin's patchy distribution across Canada in only the coldest, deepest lakes tells scientists a lot about what the country looked like at the end of the last ice age.

Fisheries and Oceans researchers have been studying Chitty, Alexie and the adjacent Baptiste and Drygeese lakes since 1969. The latest round includes studies on how industry affects fish populations. This is particularly important here in the NWT where mining is key to the territory's economic well-being, but at times may be in conflict with aboriginal fish harvesting activities and recreational angling.

Fish populations are vulnerable here because they take longer to grow in our cold, northern climate. That's why it's important to have as much knowledge as possible to better protect them.

Sacrificing access to a couple lakes is not a bad trade off if it helps us understand what's going on beneath the surface everywhere else.


Crossing the line
Editorial Comment
Roxanna Thompson
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, November 5, 2009

Many freezers and fridges across the Deh Cho have a fresh stock of moose meat thanks to this year's fall hunt.

The fall hunt is an important event in the Deh Cho's annual cycle. It signals a break from the last threads of summer and prepares the way for the onset of winter.

For many residents, the hunt is still an important source of food for their families. For others the traditional food is a good addition to supplement what they buy in the meat section in the grocery store.

The most important aspect of the hunt, however, isn't in people going out and bagging a moose, it's in the co-operation involved when groups go out and share the responsibility of harvesting not just for themselves but also for community members who couldn't make the trip.

While gathering reports from all the Deh Cho communities about how this year's hunting season went, many references were made to the communal ties that the hunt fosters.

Kakisa provides a prime example of the strength of the hunt. This year Kakisa continued its tradition of including as many community members as possible in the hunt near Tathlina Lake. More than 21 people went between two trips to the lake during the first three weeks in September.

The focus wasn't just primarily on harvesting moose. Residents also helped each other winterize their cabins and tent frames and prepare for future projects that the band has planned for the area.

The hunting itself didn't go as well as usual, but as Chief Lloyd Chicot said, as long as the band members get together and go out, it's a good year.

Trout Lake normally sets the same example. During the fall hunt it can be hard to find anyone in the community because most residents go out together to harvest animals. This year the pattern was broken due to concerns over the H1N1 flu virus.

Even in the larger communities, hunting fostered co-operation among residents. Acting Chief Albert Moses of the Pehdzeh Ki First Nation said that after some of the local harvesters finished providing for their own families, they returned to sites along the Mackenzie River to get moose for other community members. The band helped provide gasoline for the harvesters who were going back out.

In today's society, even in the North, the pace of life has increased and connections between community members and even extended family members have been stretched and broken. Families have become solitary units disconnected from those around them.

The fall hunt provides an important opportunity to reconnect to the way life used to be when resources, such as moose meat, were shared more freely between people living in close proximity. The hunt puts food in freezers but it also strengthens community ties.


A fresh slate
Editorial Comment
Andrew Rankin
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, November 5, 2009

I'm probably not the only one who feels a little overloaded when it comes to the subject of swine flu. Practically every time you open any paper or turn on the radio it's there, and for good reason. It's potentially fatal. There have been stories of otherwise perfectly healthy people succumbing to the virus. But those cases have been very rare indeed.

However, it's no wonder people have gone berserk trying to get vaccinated. Now most of the country is short on vaccinations. Stories have been told about people waiting out in the cold only to be refused a dose of vaccine for some reason. The federal government is taking a lot of criticism for coming out and saying it would have enough vaccines for anyone. That hasn't been the case. Health authorities have been criticized over doing a poor job organizing clinics. There's probably some truth to that, although locally that hasn't been the case. Clinics were open here before many other parts of Canada.

The country hasn't dealt with a pandemic like this in recent memory, and as far as I can tell it's doing the best it can under the circumstances. In any case some of the people most vulnerable to the virus remain unvaccinated.

Sure the government might have done a better job anticipating and planning to avoid such a situation, but I think many of us are probably to blame as well.

Was it necessary for people who aren't among high-risk groups to immediately rush out to get the shot? Could we have just taken a few deep breaths, waited a few weeks and let people who are especially susceptible to the virus, like children, get their shot first? There is strong evidence that older people, 50 years old or older, have full or partial immunity to swine flu.

For most it's irresponsible not to get the shot because, after all, it's about protecting your neighbour as much as it is yourself. But I think Canadians have to calm down a little and consider the facts.

Testament to the human spiritI hesitated to write an editorial this week centering on Sue Clarkson's awesome feat of running a 26-mile marathon on a broken leg last month. There were two reasons for that: she'd be embarrassed by the extra attention and I didn't want a sense of overkill related to the story featured in this edition.

But I thought it was fitting to shine extra light on her inspiring accomplishment since this week we celebrate the arrival of the Olympic Torch. Anyone who knows Sue probably knows that you probably can't find a better torch bearer, someone who represents what the Olympics should truly stand for: a reflection of the core of the human spirit.

No one I know demonstrates the power of the human spirit better than Sue does.


Corrections

Incorrect information appeared in an article in Friday's Yellowknifer ("Bevington votes to end gun registry," Nov. 6). John Hennessey is Shawn Hennessey's grandfather. Also, there was an error in the article "Rumours swirl around nurse's death." Twelve hundred people joined Tara Michelle Osmond's Facebook memorial group. Yellowknifer apologizes for any confusion or embarrassment caused by these errors.

We welcome your opinions on these editorials. Click to e-mail a letter to the editor.