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Better alternatives for NWT energy
NWT News/North - Monday, May 16, 2011

Although an extreme example, Norman Wells' declared state of emergency due to the recent shutoff of its natural gas supply highlights the need for NWT communities to begin developing alternative energy sources.

Even without the Norman Wells example, the NWT has had ample reason to begin moving away from diesel as our primary source of energy, namely the rising cost of oil. Oil prices have slipped a little recently, but the long-term trend surely remains for higher and higher.

Using biomass energy has been floated as an idea for years and in 2010 the GNWT released its biomass strategy as a guideline. Essentially the strategy looks at using wood pellets for community district energy projects.

From a financial perspective, wood pellets make sense as a source of energy. Jim Sparling, with Environment and Natural Resources, said at Yellowknife prices there is a near equivalent of 40 cents per litre of savings using wood pellets compared to home heating fuel.

As it stands, many homes and business in the NWT have already incorporated a form of district energy -- either using a wood pellet boiler or stove, or a residual heat collection system. However, Sparling said setting up a community-wide wood pellet system would be more efficient.

Norman Wells is faced with a situation where infrastructure will have to be overhauled at a community-wide level. That does create an opportunity to pilot a community-wide district heating system, supplying the town with a cleaner and cheaper wood-pellet alternative to diesel.

The NWT has challenges to overcome to develop a forestry industry which would allow for local wood pellet manufacturing. Pellets are a byproduct of sawmill operations. Sparling said manufacturing lumber in the NWT is a challenge because the territory doesn't have the necessary infrastructure to cut construction-grade material. Even if it did, the industry would have to find a way to market itself to solely Northern customers because it would not be able to compete if it tried to ship to southern customers. Recyclables such as cardboard and paper can also be used for wood pellet manufacturing but not on a large enough scale to sustain community-wide systems.

So there has to be a will to overcome the hurdles. Two years ago, MLAs David Krutko and Bob Bromley travelled to Denmark, Sweden and Finland to learn about alternative energy initiatives in those countries. They came back singing the praises of biomass systems and spoke of the merits of establishing a wood pellet industry right here in the NWT.

What's happened since then? We need action.

The advantages of such a territorial biomass industry would be three-fold. One, it would provide the NWT with a source of energy from a renewable and local source. Second, it would spark another territorial industry providing much-needed jobs. Third, wood pellets will help the territory reduce its carbon emissions.

Biomass energy is an idea that should be explored further, however, a lot of work must be done to ensure its viability and sustainability. The NWT needs the infrastructure, namely roads, to transport the material at a reasonable cost and guidelines must be established to protect our forests.


Finding our way
Nunavut News/North - Monday, May 16, 2011

A recent series of articles published in The Globe and Mail to coincide with the 11th anniversary of Nunavut's creation aired the territory's dirty laundry to a wide southern audience.

There was nothing new or shocking revealed. Yes, Nunavut has a high suicide rate. Yes, many people have mental health and substance abuse issues and there is no treatment centre in the territory. Yes, houses are overcrowded and in disrepair.

The article went on to question whether Nunavummiut are better off since 1999 and characterize Nunavut as a failed experiment.

We beg to disagree.

There's no doubt things have changed in 11 years, and much of it for the better. Nunavut's population grew 24 per cent between 1999 and 2010 and the territory's tax return -reported charitable donations doubled. In 1999, Statistics Canada didn't even measure Internet access in Nunavut, but by 2009-2010, 59 per cent of Nunavummiut households were online.

However, the persistent social issues that plague Nunavut were not solved overnight April 1, 1999, and will take longer than 11 years to solve. Some, like the housing crisis, got worse after 1999 as construction failed to keep pace with the territory's population growth.

But for every violent criminal and corrupt bureaucrat the territory has produced in the last 11 years, dozens of other Nunavummiut have been quietly going about their jobs and volunteer work, teaching children to be proud of who they are and working hard to make the territory a better place to live, day by day.

Young people who have come of age since the creation of Nunavut are making their mark on their communities, the territory and the nation in sports, arts, education and leadership. These are people like Rankin Inlet's Jordin Tootoo, the first Inuk to play in the NHL; Repulse Bay's Michael Putulik, who played and coached badminton, accompanied the 2010 Olympic torch from British Columbia to New Brunswick and now teaches at Tusarvik School; Cape Dorset's Annie Pootoogook, whose drawings of modern Inuit life have made a splash in the arts world; Clyde River's Benny Sanguya, who teaches other youth hip-hop dance as a route to increasing self esteem; and Kugluktuk's Helena Bolt, who co-ordinates her community's youth square dancing group and is one of the few of her generation to speak fluent Inuinnaqtun. These are only a few of the numerous promising young people who are helping to define our territory.

Nunavut is going to be a life-long, multi-generational endeavour following the principles of Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit of service, learning, decision-making by consensus, resourcefulness, working together, and respecting the environment. Tradition, although sometimes shaken, still lies at the heart of who we are.

Dubbing the entire territory "a culture of silence" based on a few local politicians' reluctance to talk to a southern reporter is not a fair assessment. Nunavummiut talk about their concerns often and at length when provided with a forum and among their peers. The reluctance to talk to southern media often stems from a fear of being misunderstood that this series of articles, with its broad assumptions, has done nothing to alleviate.

Nunavut is a work in progress. Give us the time, the tools and the resources, and we'll get the job done as we have for centuries.


Hold your MLA's feet to the campfire
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, May 13, 2011

When asked what needs to be done to expand our very popular and oft-crowded Fred Henne Territorial Park campground, the North Slave regional superintendent for Industry, Tourism and Investment couldn't have been more clear.

"We've got an election coming up so I guess what we would do is work with the government to see what their priorities are," said Tracy St. Denis.

It's a bold statement, one we can only presume is aimed at the seven MLAs representing Yellowknife. Residents have been complaining to them for years about escalating campground costs and the dwindling availability of approved campsites near Yellowknife, but to no avail.

To hear a senior GNWT bureaucrat suggest it be made a campaign issue is welcome news, and we will add

our voice to that goal.

Yellowknife camping enthusiasts have been taken for granted for far too long. Confronted with growing demand at Fred Henne - which accounted for nearly 30 per cent of the 8,422 NWT campsite permits handed out in 2009 - the government's solution is to push Yellowknife campers 60 km out of town to Reid Lake where 18 new sites were added in 2009, or divide four-month ballot draw campsites into two month blocks for the same $500 price.

With the price of gas pushing $1.40 a litre, going to Reid Lake and spending double for a ballot draw campsite won't be an option for some. Nor is it an alternative to build a cabin while the two-year moratorium is in place. Meanwhile, the GNWT's plan to build an RV park near Yellowknife for visiting tourists, which would have relieved some of the pressure on Fred Henne, has disappeared into the ether.

We've said it before, and we'll say it again: the obvious solution is to take the proposed Giant Mine bypass and put it by Fred Henne. That way the park can be expanded eastward while the government re-routes the Ingraham Trail away from the clean-up zone at Giant.

There's been no action on that front for years, and it's unacceptable.

We suggest Yellowknifers take St. Denis' advice and get commitments from their MLA candidates to make sure this happens.


Net billing just a baby-step forward
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, May 13, 2011

A program recently introduced by the NWT's power companies allows customers to pump energy from renewable sources - like solar and wind- into the power grid in return for cash.

It's a commendable step toward cheaper power and sustainability, but only a handful of people may benefit from it.

The Northwest Territories Power Corporation and Northland Utilities recently started the net billing pilot program, though no customers have signed up yet. The program allows 5 kilowatt solar or wind energy systems, to a maximum load of 50 kilowatts for the entire territory, on a first-come, first-served basis. This means if 10 people buy 5 kilowatt systems, which are on the low-end of what's available nationally, they will be the only ones who can take advantage of the pilot program until it ends in 2013.

Right now each 5 kilowatt system could produce at least 10,000 to 12,000 kWh per year in Yellowknife, according to Matthew Brost, general manager of Ventek Enterprises, an alternative energy system retailer in Yellowknife and Behchoko.

The power will be bought back at 14.97 cents per kWh, compared to the roughly 19 cents customers pay Northland Utilities for power, which included infrastructure maintenance costs, according to Kevin Lailey, operations superintendent at Northland Utilities.

That could equal a payback of $1,796 per year if 12,000 kWh is produced, which is a decent amount. However, the payoff would be restricted to a small number of Northerners.

Yellowknifers could benefit greatly from tapping into renewable resources in the wake of high electricity and gas prices, but this pilot program is too limited to make much of a dent.


Failure of trust
Editorial Comment
Roxanna Thompson
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, May 12, 2011

Spectres of an editorial I wrote last August came back to haunt me on May 10.

At the time I wrote the August editorial North America was still reeling from the after-effects of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico that began gushing oil following an explosion in April.

Misgivings about what can happen with oil contamination compounded when approximately 19,500 barrels of crude oil escaped from one of Enbridge Inc.'s pipelines in Michigan, U.S., in late July. The oil entered the Kalamazoo River and images of the clean-up efforts were broadcast on TV for nights.

These events combined with covering Enbridge Pipeline (NW) Inc.'s annual oil spill exercise in Fort Simpson led me to write about whether an oil spill associated with a local company operating a pipeline that runs through the Deh Cho would give anyone pause. I argued that if a spill could happen on an Enbridge line in Michigan what's to stop it happening on the Mackenzie River.

This editorial almost seemed prophetic on Tuesday when I received confirmation from Enbridge that there had been a spill on their line approximately 50 km south of Wrigley the day before. The good news in this case, if there can be good news, is that it's relatively small and contained. Enbridge seemingly responded promptly and a cleanup is underway.

There are, however, a lot of unanswered questions.

The cause of the leak isn't known and there's a big question mark hanging over how much larger the leak could have been if the pipeline hadn't already been closed at the time of the incident. The leak possibly could have been much worse.

Enbridge is in an unenviable position. The company's image of being a good, safe corporate citizen has been tarnished. Even a quick and thorough cleanup won't be enough to assure everyone that a leak won't happen again in the Deh Cho.

And people will be right to question the company. Recent events, including a 28,000 barrel spill of crude oil on April 29 from the Rainbow Pipeline owned by Plains Midstream Canada near Peace River, Alta., have shown that pipelines are not foolproof.

Residents need and deserve answers. Enbridge needs to be held responsible for what happened, however small it may be. A full accounting of what went wrong will be in order and residents must push for stringent monitoring and preventative measures from Enbridge.

This incident will also serve as a benchmark for the region when judging any future industrial developments. Even companies with clean track records can have things go wrong and both the people and the environment of the Deh Cho will be the ones who pay the price.


Adventure camp building future leaders
Editorial Comment
Samantha Stokell
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, May 12, 2011

If children have a "good" mother, chances are they will turn out great, successful and well-adjusted.

With love and attention, food and shelter, encouragement and strength, children will flourish. A stable home life where they can explore their future, learn how to read and do homework, have enough food and sleep will do wonders for growing up into a happy, well-adjusted person.

The key to all of this is the mothers. If the mothers are unemployed, single or too young to take care of their children, how can the children succeed? The real question, however, is how to create these good, strong and brave mothers.

The answer could lay with the Taiga Adventure Camp. The camp, now in its fourth year, vows to inspire and empower young women in the Northwest Territories between the ages of 11 and 17 – undoubtedly tough years.

The first two years took place in Fort Smith and offered the young women all sorts of activities, such as kayaking, self-defence, song-writing, computer skills and arts and crafts. The third year took place in Yellowknife and the camp also expanded to include a river trip.

The camp differs from others for its emphasis on inspiring a generation of young women leaders. Camp counsellors come from a variety of backgrounds and from across Canada to help these young women find the potential within them. It opens doors and shows the opportunities available. Want to be a rock star? A journalist? A scientist? A teacher? It's all possible, and this camp gives the girls the tools they need.

The values of the camp include leadership as a chance to discover personal potential; the natural environment as a source of knowledge, tradition and adventure; confidence to allow the campers a chance to discover individual skills and talents; contribution through participation; respect for themselves and others; and learning through curiosity, positive risk-taking moving past a failure.

It's a positive atmosphere where the campers can explore who they are and who they can be when they're away from home and the distractions or abuses they may face.

These are values that anyone can use. If the camp is successful, maybe in 20 years these young girls from across the territory will be the leaders of businesses, communities and families. Hopefully the values they learn here will help them turn into the type of mothers that will help this territory grow and succeed.


BHP steps up
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, May 11, 2011

A $700,000 donation by anybody is going to generate a lot of attention, especially when it's going to a cause as worthy as the Betty House transitional home for women.

Not stopping with Betty House last week, mining company BHP Billiton also recently donated $100,000 toward to the construction of the NWT SPCA's animal shelter. BHP Billiton's generosity proves yet again how critically important the mining community is to this city, from its early days as a gold mining boom town to the present with diamond mines on the tundra.

Some may recall a few years back when, faced with cost overruns at the yet-to-be completed Shorty Brown rink of the Multiplex arena, Diavik Diamond Mines stepped in to offer a $50,000 donation to Facilities for Kids and agreed to manage the project, which saved the city close to $2 million. More recently, Diavik led the charge in revamping cleanup efforts with the Polishing the Gem campaign in hopes of attracting more of its employees to come live here.

There have also been numerous sparkling gems donated to various fundraising causes in our city.

All three diamond mining companies operating in the NWT have valuable contributions to Yellowknife many times over, although it could be argued De Beers has the lower profile to date. The diamond giant handed out $3.8 million in cash, in-kind and staff time contributions in 2009 but it's hard to think of a community project in Yellowknife that has De Beers' stamp of generosity on it, the way Diavik and BHP have put their brand on their projects.

Surely, such an initiative is just around the corner.


Demand better service
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Home businesses relying on cellphones need reliable service to operate, and entrepreneurs should not have to forego the best available technology in the NWT because they can't rely on the system.

There have been complaints in the North about cellphone customers on the 3G network losing calls and being frustrated by slow Internet browser service during peak hours. With little competition on the cellphone market, and none for smartphones, only Bell Canada's customers can hold the company accountable for better service.

Landline phones are quickly becoming obsolete and, as is the case around the world, people in the NWT are hungry for the latest technology. If Bell did not have the foresight to envision the level of demand when it installed the network in late 2009, and if it failed to position itself to respond rapidly to the need for growth in the Yellowknife market, the telecommunications firm made a mistake and customers should demand it be rectified.

A Bell representative acknowledged "congestion" issues on the system. He told Yellowknifer that changes had been made to improve network service, and that the situation would be monitored. If customers are still experiencing problems, they must speak up and not let the company off the hook.


Train is back on track
Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, May 11, 2011

This year's NHL playoffs have been somewhat perplexing, to say the least.

After an opening round highlighted by a flurry of overtime games in closely-matched series, the second round's been a hodgepodge of blowouts marked, for the most part, by questionable officiating (it pains me to write that) and disinterested play by many supposed stars.

As I wrote this, Tampa Bay had ousted favoured Washington in straight games, with only Capitals star Alex Ovechkin looking and sounding like he really cared.

Boston was up 3-0 on a Philadelphia squad whose goaltending has resembled some form of twisted hockey production of the Keystone Kops meet Captain Hook.

San Jose was also up 3-0 on an aging Detroit team in a series that, save for one hit thrown at Dany Heatley by Wings D-man Niklas Kronwell, has to rate as one of the most polite Stanley Cup match-ups even played.

That leaves us with the agonizing Vancouver versus Nashville encounter.

With the Canucks up 3-1 heading back to Vancouver, this has been a series that could easily have gone either way.

Take away the ridiculous hooking call on Nashville's Shea Weber, and the series could easily have been notched at two.

Yet the hooking call, as questionable as it was, still takes a back seat to the 'clipping' penalty called earlier in the playoffs as the result of an old-fashioned hip check.

The dilemma for many fans watching the Vancouver versus Nashville series has been, of course, being torn between cheering for the Canadian team or the one with our very own Jordin Tootoo of Rankin Inlet.

To the casual observer, this may not seem like a big deal.

But, believe it or not, it's a very big deal to those in the Kivalliq who are true hockey lovers because there's a sense of guilt attached to cheering against Tootoo.

You may be a Canucks fan or a hockey nut who dearly wants a Canadian team to bring the Cup home, yet you can't help but feel bad when you see a dejected Tootoo leaving the ice after playing his heart out.

And, make no mistake about it, Tootoo has been playing his heart out since the playoffs began.

In fact, since Tootoo rejoined the Preds late in the regular season, he's been playing the best hockey of his NHL career by a Kivalliq mile.

And that's the silver lining for those who have been wearing their Canucks jersey at home with the window blinds pulled down tight.

Fans who know Tootoo are cheering for him to win on a far larger scale than becoming a Stanley Cup champion this year.

They're cheering for him to continue in the skating lane he's on to winning the game of life.

A number of Tootoo's friends have all said they can't remember ever seeing him so happy during the past few months.

Maybe it won't be this year, but if he continues with his success -- which we have every belief he will -- the day will come when Tootoo arrives on a scheduled flight to Rankin to share the Cup with people in his hometown for one unforgettable visit.

Make no mistake about it, the Tootoo Train is back on track and steaming in that direction!

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