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Yellowknife's tourism strengths
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, Aug 1, 2012
Yellowknife certainly doesn't always live up to its tourism potential.

A couple from B.C. were not impressed during their recent visit North, according to their son Al Cook, a Yellowknife resident. The Wildcat Cafe wasn't open, tourism sites were difficult to find, and museum exhibits weren't up to snuff, by their standards.

This is a shame, and the mixed messages offered by Mayor Gord Van Tighem and the Department of Transportation over signage indicates that poor communication is part of the problem.

The mayor suggests the department is not always receptive to the call for more and better signage to help direct tourists to places like the museum and the legislative assembly; a Transportation spokesperson insists that the department will assist with whatever signage is needed to help direct tourists as long it doesn't distract drivers.

Well good then, the two levels of government should have no problem sorting things out and putting more signs in place.

As for the Wildcat, we're sure it will be great once the renovations are complete, even though they are a year behind. And the exhibits at the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre? We expect after seven years of developing new ones the museum will have a wonderfully complete collection - hopefully very soon.

At the end of the day, we have to remember where we are. This isn't Toronto, Orlando or Rome. We don't have the money, infrastructure or critical mass to compete with any of those places, let alone Banff or Summerside, P.E.I.

Most tourists visiting Yellowknife aren't coming for the museum or so they can stroll through the legislative assembly, although a few may make a trip here for special events (see editorial below).

However, our ace in the hole is the lack of crowds and the vast wilderness that surrounds us.

Seven thousand Japanese visited our city last year just so they could enjoy the Northern lights with a minimum of light pollution. Sure, we can use a few more signs, but most of all we want those who appreciate the great outdoors to keep coming back.


Yellowknife's summer really rocks
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, Aug 1, 2012

The 32nd annual Folk on the Rocks music festival entertained a huge crowd of Yellowknife residents, tourists and travellers of all ages late last month. Based on comments from festival-goers who shared their opinions with Yellowknifer, audiences were very impressed.

The city's signature summer event - which spans two days, or three if Warm the Rocks is included - puts the spotlight on talented local performers alongside professional and award-winning entertainers from across the North and elsewhere in Canada.

As organizers gather to debrief about what worked and what can be improved for next year, residents should also take a moment to reflect on their collective role in making this year's festival a success.

Regardless of who's on stage, one of the factors that makes Folk on the Rocks so fun for residents and visitors alike is the people who volunteer or buy tickets to attend. It's a great chance to meet new people and greet old friends and neighbours under the summer sun.

By supporting this year's Folk on the Rocks with their attendance, Yellowknife residents helped organizers pull off what seems to have been one of the more successful festivals in recent years.

Although Folk is now history for another year, summer is not over and neither is festival season.

On Friday, the sixth annual Old Town Ramble and Ride neighbourhood festival is scheduled to kick off, ushering in a weekend filled with more live music, workshops and family entertainment.

Once again, one of the variables that can help make this community festival a success is the people who choose to join in the fun by supporting festival organizers with their enthusiastic participation.


A sign of the times
Tim Edwards
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, Aug 1, 2012

Justin Bieber made a gaffe in a recent issue of Rolling Stone Magazine, which speaks volumes about not only the dearth of public education on aboriginal peoples, but to the type of person that is idolized today.

"I'm actually part Indian," Bieber told Rolling Stone. "I think Inuit or something? I'm enough per cent that in Canada I can get free gas."

Whether or not there is any validity to his claim of ancestry - it would only be more aggravating if there was - that comment offers a clear picture of the understanding between aboriginals, especially those from the North, and many non-aboriginals.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has just in the last few years made an official apology from the Government of Canada to victims of abuse at residential schools, and the conversation is just starting on educating Canada's children on that dark period in the country's history. Education will really be the key to fostering understanding between peoples.

Students in Canada, no matter what province or territory, should at the very least be able to distinguish between major groups of indigenous peoples, so they're not left guessing if someone is "Indian ... Inuit or something" or left assuming without base that aboriginal people get free gas.

Education will also help defeat the racist misconception that aboriginal peoples are just recipients of handouts - people need to know about the ambitious Inuit starting up businesses across the North, and the Inuit hunters who go out and bring food back to their families and communities.

It's hard to reach young people in the south today. The pervading culture throughout most of Canada is pop culture, where it matters more to kids to catch a teaser for the new Bieber music video, or find out with whom Twilight's Kristen Stewart is cheating on her boyfriend, than it does for them to actually look at their country and how its people are living.

I could rail on and on about how distressing it is that people such as Bieber - young, insulated celebrities - are put on a pedestal while benevolent and wise people trying hard to make positive change on the community and national levels are hardly noticed, but I'll leave it at that.

Until education about Canada's peoples is given more than just lip service, the sort of ignorance, bordering on racism, that Bieber spouted to Rolling Stone will continue to be spouted - and distressed editors will continue to have their face in their palm realizing they've actually written an editorial about Justin Bieber.


Buy local
NWT News/North - Monday, July 30, 2012

Complaining about food prices is a Northern pastime, and rightly so considering costs can, at times, be double or even triple what consumers expect in the south.

It is doubtful, even with changes to subsidies, we will see much decrease in that aspect of our cost of living which means we need to stop looking for government help and start finding more innovative solutions to our food security issues.

A new study commissioned by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is investigating the economic viability of greenhouses in the North. It's a great idea and has the potential to grow on the success many Northern garden projects have demonstrated.

Potato farms in the Sahtu, the greenhouse in Inuvik and community gardens sprouting up in various NWT communities have demonstrated the growing potential during the territory's long summer days.

Armed with the proper information, a savvy entrepreneur could turn what is currently a green hobby into a thriving business venture. Add a little technology, such as hydroponics, and the NWT could be growing food all year round.

Would it be cheaper? Probably not. However, if the cost was comparable not only would Northern consumers gain access to fresher produce, they would also be spending money in support of a community business employing friends and family.

Higher costs of food might be more palatable if the money was staying in the community.


Review board delays unacceptable
NWT News/North - Monday, July 30, 2012

The Mackenzie Valley Environmental Impact Review Board's mandate is two-fold, each bearing equal importance.

On the one hand, the board is charged with the important task of safeguarding the environment and protecting people affected by development.

On the flip side, the board is also responsible for helping to facilitate development that meets the standards of environmental protection and provides fair benefits and compensation to the people directly affected.

It is in that role the review board has chronically fallen short.

Although it is understandable that comprehensive reviews of major projects can take time, there should be set policy on what can be considered acceptable.

We don't want to recommend pushing development quickly through the review process, but our economy needs development if we are to prosper. Nothing deters potential investors more than red tape, especially when it has the reputation of tying up applications for years.

Its most recent blunder with Fortune Minerals certainly doesn't help the board's public image. Failing to properly schedule hearings on Fortune Minerals' NICO gold-copper-bismuth-cobalt deposit near Behchoko due to a clerical error demonstrates a need for policy regarding the board's timeliness when addressing applications, as suggested by Tom Hoefer, executive director of the NWT and Nunavut Chamber of Mines.

We need to balance environmental protection with generating greater wealth and jobs in the NWT. Investment can only come with some level of certainty and the Mackenzie Valley Environmental Impact Review Board has offered far too little of that.


Nunavummiut need to come to the table
Nunavut News/North - Monday, July 30, 2012

In an organized protest, it is critical to have a defined concern and a specific target audience. Get a sense of what you want your audience to do, and see if they are willing to help resolve your concern.

As Nunavummiut plan another round of food protests for the end of August, organizers would be wise to consider the following: If the goal is to get retailers and the government to lower the price of pop, you're wasting your time.

Nutrition North Canada is not designed to subsidize junk food. That's like asking the federal government to subsidize cigarettes. Both are bad for you, and they are bad for governments, who have to pay the health-care costs associated with their long-term consumption.

Despite this, members of the Feeding My Family Facebook page regularly post junk food as examples of the high cost of food in Nunavut.

The implication is that food subsidies should include all food. Sorry, but the federal government will never subsidize the purchase of products that cause health problems, specifically those high in sugar, salt or fat. The target audience of your protest is not interested.

At the same time, some protesters want retailers to drop their prices to a point where they don't make a profit. That's never going to happen, either.

So let's consider the position of the target audience. The federal government says Nutrition North Canada is lowering prices for healthy food, and the North West Company agrees. Their statistics are easy to confirm.

Still, costs here remain higher than in Ottawa. They always will, so what do we do now?

Come to the table. If governments and retailers must shoulder the responsibility of increasing food security in Nunavut, so must Nunavummiut.

Cigarettes, pop, and microwaved meals should not be the core of peoples' diets. Foods promoted by the Nunavut Food Guide - and subsidized by the government - should be.

Nutrition North lowers grocery prices and gives every consumer access to the subsidy. That's an improvement from Food Mail, which was only available to those with a credit card. Going forward, the government can increase Northerners' confidence in Nutrition North by proving retailers are passing on the savings, and by increasing the subsidy and program budget annually.

But if Nunavummiut want the cost of living in Nunavut to go down, we need to determine what solutions give us the means to earn more money, make living in the North more affordable, and show us we're important to Canada. Those solutions largely have to come from us.

Governments and retailers stay in business by serving the people who give them money.

To boost support, we need to stop talking about $100 cases of water. No one sympathizes with the person who buys that if the taps are working. Instead, Nunavummiut need to show Canada the territory's real challenges - and there are many - and come to the table with answers that make sense to those who can effect change.


Floatplane dock good for tourism
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, July 27, 2012

The roar of jet engines over a sea of happy Yellowknifers, an armada of affluent tourists flying planes to our city - it's clear by the number of people who attended the Yellowknife air show and those who visited in their own planes with the Century Flight Club earlier this month, that our city is still much ado about airplanes.

Aircraft remain, as they were in 1930s and '40s, a major lifeline to the south.

The Yellowknife Airport ranked 32nd in the number of aircraft movements among airports nationally, according to Statistics Canada, with 53,463 flights landing and taking off in 2010. That's a fair-sized number for a city of fewer than 20,000 people.

In the midst of all this hustle and bustle in the skies above us is the ongoing saga at city hall concerning the municipality's desire to install a 12-metre dock bought and paid for with a $50,000 tourism grant from the Department of Industry, Tourism and Investment. The dock, recommended by the Yellowknife Harbour Commission to extend from a small park at the end of Lessard Drive on Latham Island, is supposed to accommodate visiting floatplane fliers and small boats.

The city had hoped to install the dock this summer but has faced fierce opposition from nearby residents. The expressed fear is that a sudden influx of floatplanes will disrupt the neighbourhood and cause safety concerns, but Latham Island residents have always been suspicious of incursions by the city.

Those suspicions date back 12 years to the failed Waterfront Plan that called for public trails along the Latham Island shore that would have crossed over privately-built docks on public land.

The city hasn't helped itself by its seemingly high-handed approach to the matter. Residents complained about a lack of consultation from by the city, and were riled by administration's decision to purchase the dock before receiving approval from city council. Word that senior administrative officer Bob Long was parking his floatplane for free on city-leased land on Wiley Road was cause for even more ruffled feathers.

Hal Logsdon, president of the NWT Float Plane Association, proposed to put the dock there, to the approval of Latham residents, but administration rejected that idea, citing further opposition from the adjacent Great Slave Yacht Club and a family nearby.

Surrounded by opposition, city council deferred a decision yet again on where to put the dock Monday.

We sympathize but for better or worse, we have the dock now and it ought to go somewhere on the water rather than be mothballed in a garage somewhere. City councillor David Wind surmised that the dock will become quickly populated by planes belonging to affluent residents. We hope not because it is quite obvious there is an appetite among out-of-town plane owners to visit Yellowknife and spend money. The Yellowknife Air Show and Century Club injected $1.75 million into the local economy with their presence earlier this month. No doubt last year's Floatplane Fly-in and an unrelated visit by 20 fliers two weeks later also gave our city's economy a boost.

It doesn't look like the dock will get installed this year. Hopefully it will be ready for next year's Floatplane Fly-in - somewhere on Back Bay. It would be a shame if this city council simply decides to play out the clock and leave the mess for the next council to sort out following the election this fall.


Making a beloved event even stronger
Editorial Comment
Roxanna Thompson
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, July 26, 2012

Mackenzie Days has come a long way.

A few years ago the annual summer event was synonymous with out-of-control, alcohol-fuelled parties.

The parties weren't supported by the organizers of Mackenzie Days, but they happened anyway during the same long weekend in Fort Providence.

Even the popular spelling of the name of the event at the time, Mackenzie Daze, added to the suggestion of over indulgence.

The members of the Mackenzie Days Committee have worked hard to turn the annual event's image around.

For a number of years, a lot of effort has gone into promoting Mackenzie Days as a family-oriented event.

An additional step this summer, with the decision to separate the adult-focused events, especially those involving alcohol, to a different weekend is following with that intent.

The adult dance, bingo and talent show are taking place between July 27 and 29 while the rest of the events will run from Aug. 3 to 5.

It's a great idea.

By moving those three events to an earlier weekend, the committee is ensuring the long weekend can be devoted to families, and that is what Mackenzie Days is all about.

Adults will still be able to go to the dance and drink if they so choose, but that drinking won't affect the majority of the other events.

The Mackenzie Days Committee is also moving in the right direction in another area.

This year, the committee held a series of community meetings to see if there was still interest in Fort Providence for Mackenzie Days. The meetings were designed to get more residents involved in the planning and organizing stages of the events.

As a result, instead of four or five committee members doing the bulk of the ground work, there will be approximately 20 people involved from the beginning. An added bonus of the additional community buy-in will be an increased sense of community pride and ownership in the event.

Mackenzie Days has been celebrated in Fort Providence for decades. The changes being made this year should ensure the popular long-weekend event continues to delight even more generations.

All Fort Providence residents and people in the surrounding communities should remember to come out and support Mackenzie Days.


Got knowledge?
Editorial Comment
Laura Busch
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, July 26, 2012

The 24th annual Great Northern Arts Festival has come and gone.

With it came and went artists, tourists, volunteers, teachers and friends.

Inuvik, and the rest of the North, has a vibrant arts community, filled with talented artists of all kinds. Spinners, carvers, painters, sewers, knitters and storytellers, to name a few, are everywhere.

Unfortunately, it can be a struggle to showcase and share these talents with visitors and with Northerners.

Walking through the gallery at the Midnight Sun Recreation Complex during the festival was overwhelming. So much talent and tradition was on display.

But the true art wasn't the finished pieces with prices clearly marked and attached.

The true talent was in the workshop spaces.

For the duration of the festival, participants could make anything. A basket made of goose feet, sealskin mittens, felted fish, yarn, kamiiks, dream catchers, drums, tie-dyed shirts and fabric – the list could go on indefinitely.

Whether you signed up for a workshop or not, you could stroll through and watch people at work.

That was the amazing part. The shared knowledge transformed a room of artists, residents and tourists into a close-knit community.

It was a place to get a taste of traditional or contemporary culture. One moment you could be scraping hide while in the next you were pouring thickened acrylic paint onto surfaces so it could dry before being peeled off and turned into three-dimensional objects.

That is exactly what's missing from the everyday.

There are so many skills passed down from generation to generation, but with an onslaught of technology it's easy to forget about the simple pleasures of sitting down and sharing knowledge with someone.

The workshops were a place where language didn't matter, so much could be shown with a hand gesture or the simple shake of the head.

It wasn't only tourists who signed up for workshops. Charissa Alain-Lilly led two workshops, but still found time to join Kate Inuktalik's kamiiks workshop.

Watching Inuktalik quickly trim caribou legs, Alain-Lilly remarked on how rare this knowledge was becoming.

"This is almost a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," she said.

"There aren't any written patterns and fewer and fewer people know how to do this."

It's time to start preserving these skills. People don't live forever, but they can leave what they've learned for others.

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