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Give peace a chance
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Conflict in the Middle East is nothing new. It's an ancient land home to diverse groups of people who have long fought for the right to live in freedom and, in some cases, simply to survive.

Canada, by contrast, for much of its history, has been a relatively peaceful country - a place where people from the Middle East and around the world choose to come because of the opportunities that exist, including the chance to leave conflict behind and live in peace.

Yellowknife has evolved into a centre that is just about as diverse and multicultural as anywhere in the country, or on the planet.

That means, for good and for bad (mostly good), we are affected and influenced by bigger, global issues - including the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the geopolitics of the Middle East. And it means that, in return, in a world made smaller by technology, we also have the chance to influence people living and working elsewhere.

Recently, a prominent member of Yellowknife's small Jewish community openly attacked the Yellowknife group Focus on Palestine for what she describes as its anti-Israel, anti-Jewish agenda -- which, she further contends, either directly or indirectly encourages anti-Semitism.

The issues tackled by Focus on Palestine are not without controversy. But the group also prides itself on being open and on welcoming diverse perspectives as it works, in its words, to raise awareness, promote peace and pressure the Canadian government to adopt Middle East policies that are "fair and just."

Being open, raising awareness, lobbying ... that, most Canadians would agree, is the way we go about trying to change things in this country, and beyond.

In that sense, there could just as well be a Focus on Israel group in Yellowknife. Not only Israelis or Jewish people could belong, but anyone interested in learning more about the region, people, culture and/or religion - and what could be done to promote sustainable peace in the region.

That's the beauty of Canada, and Yellowknife - the exchange of ideas we can have here.


Paving their way to a stronger workforce
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Yellowknives Dene faced a dilemma in finally undertaking a Ndilo paving project decades in the making: get the job done on time or delay the task while seeking workers from the community.

The latter objective prevailed, but has caused frustration for some residents.

Community members celebrated the historic agreement that the Yellowknives Dene First Nation and the City of Yellowknife signed last summer when the two parties agreed to split the cost of the $1.4 million paving project.

Ndilo Chief Ted Tsetta was adamant the project would be carried out by the people of Ndilo, not by outsiders taking local jobs away from the community. The contract was given to Det'on Cho Corporation, the Yellowknives' economic arm, allowing the band to employ its own people alongside a Yellowknife engineering firm.

An initial project start date was set for July 15. That date came and went and no action was seen on the dusty roads.

Roy Erasmus Jr., president and CEO of Det'on Cho Corp., blamed the delay on turnover and people being away on holidays.

To satisfy local jobs in the community, proper training needs to take place so the stalling of future projects is less likely. Creating an employee database and offering continuous training programs are necessities to ensure the community's workforce is prepared and its leaders are aware, well in advance, of what resources they will have on hand.


Paper in good hands, but not so sure about hockey
Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Well, valued readers, by the time you're reading this I will be enjoying my summer vacation in Cape Breton, N.S.

A few glorious weeks of spending time with my mom and daughter, while fixing up the old homestead, and then back to Rankin for another year at the helm of Kivalliq News.

I leave you in the more-than-capable hands of Yellowknife reporter Nicole Veerman, who will steer the ship until my return.

I look forward to seeing everyone in September, but a month away from another hockey season in the Arctic's hockeytown of Rankin Inlet.

Mentioning another year of hockey in Rankin makes for the perfect segue into yet more rule changes for the upcoming season.

Teams and coaches can expect to see players sent to the sin bin this year even when they make accidental contact with an opponent's head area.

A slow-down to the crack-down on any form of physical play in today's game seems nowhere in sight.

I rarely watch the so-called TV specials dealing with all the reasons why more and more physical contact should be removed from the game because it's become pointless.

However, a few weeks ago I was having trouble calling it a night and, while surfing TV channels to find something to pass the time, I came across part four of just such a series on one of the sports channels.

Bored, with nothing better to watch, I tuned in for a while and, as it turns out, I was glad I did.

A couple of the show's well-dressed talking heads were analyzing the information given during the program, when one started in on the old-school culture that still, apparently, runs the game.

The gist of his tirade was the difficult time those who want to make the game safer to play have getting their points across to these old-school thinkers.

I cannot quote the guy verbatim (hey, it was late), but I sat there with jaw hanging down and mouth open in bemused disbelief as he talked about bringing more changes to the rules in order to further eliminate physical play.

He was actually quite smug in his delivery when he stated emphatically the fans don't want it, the players don't want it and the teams don't want it, so it was up to others to make it happen.

And there you have it: the perfect encapsulation of the we-know-what's-best-for-you mentality behind hockey's endless stream of mega rule changes year after year.

Many of these same deep thinkers would have you believe the crackdown on all the rules and the removal of more and more physicality from hockey has opened up the game, and we now have far more offence than we did in the dreaded dead-puck era before the 2004-05 lockout.

Surprising then, that the Ottawa Senators scored the most goals per game the year before the lockout with 3.20, while the Vancouver Canucks were the best in the NHL this past season with 3.15.

Not exactly what you'd call blazing progress, although the NHL did have one 50-goal scorer and one player with more than 100 points.

Hockey will always be loved in Canada, but the game is changing.

And, while there can be little doubt some of the changes will make it safer, only time will tell if they'll actually make the game better!


Respect First Nations' rights
NWT News/North - Monday, July 25, 2011

It's promising that the NWT and Nunavut Chamber of Mines and Akaitcho First Nation have decided to hammer out consistent rules when dealing with developers on Akaitcho land.

Developing on aboriginal land requires a delicate balance between preservation and cultural respect and providing economic and employment benefits to First Nation members.

At present, exploration and development on Akaitcho land is a cumbersome and an often frustrating process. Largely, that is due to requirements set up by the First Nation that are outside regular development laws, which creates an uncertain atmosphere and therefore deters businesses from investing.

However, the chamber of mines' decision to accept an invitation by the Akaitcho to set guidelines the chamber can accept will go a long way towards providing a consistent development environment.

There is a wealth of natural resources on Akaitcho land which should attract multi-millions of dollars in exploration and mining work. However, companies aren't willing to take the risk for fear they will be tied up in legal battles, regulatory red tape and changing demands from the Akaitcho.

The Akaitcho should be commended for sticking to its guns; the First Nation will now have an opportunity to ensure development in its territory fits with its vision for the land and will benefit its people.

All too often, governments and developers bypass First Nations leadership when it comes to developing on traditional lands, only to gather their input in community meetings midway through the regulatory process - meetings that are often questioned because the feedback from community members seems to carry little influence.

Aboriginal governments and leaders should be industry's first stop when considering doing business in the NWT. Not only would that identify the potential obstacles that may exist but it will also demonstrate respect for the rightful beneficiaries of the land. Simply meeting with First Nations isn't enough, however. Companies must come North with a plan. That plan must include how a mine or oil wells, for example, will benefit First Nations members with jobs, contracts and resource royalties to help them build their communities. It must also adequately address environmental risks.

In short, First Nations and Metis leaders should be part of the development process from start to finish and not merely a stage in the consultation process. When this begins to be the norm, the development process will move faster and benefit industry and the people of the NWT alike.

Akaitcho leaders estimate their lands - home to the NWT's active diamond mines - accounted for more than $1.6 billion of the territory's $3.2 billion GDP in 2009. Finance Minister Michael Miltenberger projected in his 2010 budget address that 2010 and 2011 would show four per cent growth in the territory's GDP -- 2.8 per cent in 2010 and 1.2 per cent in 2011. With a lot of mining potential still untapped on Akaitcho lands, much of the NWT's future growth will likely come from the Akaitcho territory. With that in mind any move to help ease tensions between the Akaitcho, industry and the chamber of mines should be supported fully by the GNWT.


Food for thought
Nunavut News/North - Monday, July 25, 2011

The community freezer breaks, spoiling months' worth of country food. At the same time, federal pension cheques - a main source of financial support for many families - are late due to a postal lockout, making the purchase of high-priced store food difficult.

Is this an emergency? That depends on whose shoes you're wearing - those of a cash-strapped elder in Iglulik with nothing to feed her grandkids or those of a government-salaried bureaucrat in Pangnirtung dealing with e-mails marked urgent on a Friday afternoon.

When these circumstances came to pass in Iglulik earlier this month, the community's social services worker knew there was a fund that could potentially be tapped to provide emergency cash for food.

But when she sent an e-mail to the appropriate authorities asking if it was possible to release some of this money to make sure kids didn't go hungry, what she got back was a flippant one-line response that did not sound in the least concerned about the situation.

Now e-mail is a tricky thing. Typed words don't convey one's tone and brusque sentences can easily sound harsher than intended.

But to dismiss a plea for help by disputing whether hungry Iglulik residents met the medical definition of emaciation was pretty darn heartless.

The Department of Education has since verbally apologized to the mayor of Iglulik, and will be sending a written apology to the hamlet. But a spokesperson said there wasn't much that could have been done at the time of the request for help, anyway, because it was late in the day on a Friday.

We're sure Nunavummiut will take this lesson to heart. If you're going to have a hunger crisis, make sure to plan it for a Monday or Tuesday, preferably in the morning, if you expect prompt attention from the territorial government. Otherwise, it seems, you're on your own.


Ramps only half the battle
Nunavut News/North - Monday, July 25, 2011

Later this year, the Government of Nunavut will conduct a condition assessment and inventory of its buildings across the territory.

The estimated cost for this review is $3.8 million, however automatic doors, or the lack of them, weren't even on the list of things to look at until Nunavut News/North asked about them.

People using wheelchairs and other mobility-assisting devices face plenty of challenges in Nunavut's communities - gaining accessible transportation is one, another is the installation of ramps instead of stairs.

But in many communities, people using wheelchairs can propel themselves from an accessible vehicle to the entrance of a hamlet or GN building via a ramp, but then they're stuck due -to the lack of an automatic door.

The cost of installing an automatic door is estimated at about $30,000, not including operation and maintenance in the harsh Arctic climate.

Nunavut may not be able to afford to install automatic doors in all the buildings that should ideally have them, but priority should be given to making health centres and community halls accessible to everyone. Nor should the consideration of accessibility be an afterthought.


Ramp it up!
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, July 22, 2011

Enough is enough.

It's time the management of Centre Square Mall follows the order issued by the NWT fire marshal, listen to customers and simply do the right thing - instal an access ramp at its Franklin Avenue entrance.

Wheelchair-users and their supporters have been pushing for the ramp since early 2009 when management of the upper mall installed a glass partition at the 49th Street entrance - the only entrance with a ramp - forcing users to wait and be buzzed in by Yk Inn staff.

But despite a February 2010 order by Fire Marshal Stephen Moss that a ramp be built at the busy Franklin Avenue entrance, no work has started, leaving people with wheelchairs or strollers on the outside looking in.

Both management and the city have debated a design that won't interfere with pedestrian traffic. And Moss cut the mall some slack in meeting his June 2010 deadline (more than a year ago!).

In the latest development last month, the mall submitted a revised design that appears to meet city criteria. But the reaction of one mother with a stroller when she heard the news - "I'll believe it when I see it" - is typical.

It shouldn't be this hard, especially when paying customers are involved. Either mall management has to build an access ramp at Franklin Avenue or the fire marshal has to get busy enforcing his own order. Either way, access shouldn't be denied any longer.


Invest in artistic community to help revive downtown
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, July 22, 2011

Although there has always been an expiration date for the Artist Run Community Centre in the old Pentecostal Church on 49th Street, the ticking of the clock is growing louder.

The first step toward the plot of land being transferred from its current owner, who is allowing the artists to use the space, to the GNWT took place at city council earlier this month.

It's not a question of how the artist community can keep the land, but how the city and territory should profit from the passion and devotion of those running and using the space.

Over recent years, the City of Yellowknife has invested millions of dollars into such shiny facilities as the Multiplex and the Fieldhouse.

There seems to be no shortage of funding available from local and higher levels of government for sports and recreation.

While facilities catering to active lifestyles and recreation are an asset and a necessity in a community, the same can be said for the arts.

The last major investment in the city for the arts community was the Northern Arts and Cultural Centre in 1984, with contributions from federal, provincial and territorial governments and an active national fundraising campaign led by then-mayor Michael Ballantyne.

The arts community has turned an empty shell of a building into the foundation of a strong arts centre, a stage for art shows and musical performances, helping to revive a dying downtown.

The artists, with the help of the business community, have shown the way. It's time governments - territorial and municipal - play a stronger role in sustaining and growing the capital city's art community.


And it begins
Editorial Comment
Roxanna Thompson
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, July 21, 2011

The region's residents, both those in the Deh Cho and Nahendeh electoral districts, had better start preparing themselves for what's ahead.

Although people wanting to run in the fall territorial election can't officially become candidates until the week of Sept. 5 to 9, the upcoming election is already on the minds of some, including the region's two current MLAs.

Both Michael McLeod in the Deh Cho and Kevin Menicoche in the Nahendeh have publicly announced their plans to run for re-election. Both are assembling teams to help them examine the current issues and decide which they want to focus on in their platforms.

The region's residents can look forward to at least two months of political discussions and debates in the lead up to the Oct. 3 election. The questions that will soon be answered are which issues the candidates will focus on and will those issues coincide with what is really of concern for residents.

McLeod noted that during his three terms in office, the cost of living in the North has remained a primary issue. Because these costs affect everyone, it's a safe bet they will be debated by those looking to become part of the 17th legislative assembly.

Housing and employment were also flagged by McLeod as long-standing issues. For Menicoche, education, health and highways have been the focus of two terms in office. Comments at constituency meetings have shown those issues continue to remain important.

While the mainstays will absorb a lot of attention, it could be issues that have more recently risen to prominence that will sway voters toward certain candidates.

If the Dene Nation has anything to say about it, devolution will be in the spotlight during the election period. A vocal opponent of the signed devolution agreement-in-principle, part of the nation's plan to address the issue is to make sure the MLAs who are elected in the fall share its views on devolution and are willing to work on the issue.

If the Dene Nation puts its support behind certain candidates and can encourage its members to vote for them, it could prove to be a major force in the election.

Concerns about the protection of land and water, especially in light of Enbridge Pipeline Inc.'s spill on the Norman Wells line and continued oil sands development in Alberta, will also likely feature prominently in the election.

The region's residents have just more than two months to decide which, if any, of these issues matter to them and which candidate is best suited to represent them. These decisions could mean in with new and out with the old in the two electoral districts or a continuation of the current leadership.


Tourists need tours
Editorial Comment
Samantha Stokell
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, July 21, 2011

The Great Northern Arts Festival is fantastic. It's brought a bit of big city living to Inuvik, with the beautiful art, live music every night and a sense of bustle, busy-ness and excitement.

It's a celebration of Northern art (as the title implies), but also what goes with that – Northern culture in whatever form it may take. It could be an artist who has lived North of 60 for two years, 40 years or their entire life. The definition of a Northern artist is changeable; it can be someone born in the North who has taken their craft south or someone who moved here and became inspired by the landscape.

The perk of this festival is that the artists can all learn from each other and further influence Northern culture and art. The sharing of ideas and techniques with other artists and visitors is certainly helping with the energy of the festival.

For a tourist or a resident, the workshops are brilliant. Increasing the number of classes available so that more people can participate in a variety of different art forms is a fantastic idea. In Inuvik, not a lot happens and not a lot is available for visitors to take advantage of. Without the festival to provide activities, these travellers can scramble for things to do.

Yes, there is the Igloo church. It's beautiful and full of history, but doesn't necessarily fill up your day. Same with the greenhouse. It is amazing and beautiful and useful, but doesn't really take that long to tour.

After doing a few weeks of Tourist of the Week, it seems that almost all visitors have the same schedule: Drive up the Dempster; stay in Inuvik for two days; visit Tuktoyaktuk for one day; drive back down the Dempster. People rarely stay for more than a couple of days because there isn't anything to fill those days up.

The potential here is endless. As some of the tour operators have suggested, aboriginal culture is a key area for growth. Why not embrace and celebrate it more? Aboriginal Day is an exciting and interesting event – why not share that culture year round? Set up a culture camp in Jim Koe Park during the summer months or at the visitor centre where an elder (or a younger) can do demonstrations and talk a bit about their heritage, from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday to Friday?

As well, Inuvik is a transient community and even people who live here likely want to play tourist every once in a while and learn more about the place they live in. Maybe the Great Northern Arts Festival could hold once-a-month artist workshops, simply to provide an activity, raise some money and increase an awareness of culture in Inuvik.

The point is that Inuvik right now really feel like a destination. It's at the end of the road, but people are only here because they can get to the Arctic Ocean. Build a road and people will just continue farther North. Before the road to Tuktoyaktuk is built, we've got to build up Inuvik's tourism options because otherwise, when the Dempster is completed to the ocean, people will just keep on driving.

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