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More campsites needed Yellowknifer - Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Nestled on a Precambrian shore a short half-hour drive from the city, it is the premier camping site around Yellowknife.
Visitors have access to a 17-km long lake filled with attractive islands, pristine water and tasty lake trout. The sheltered, sandy terrain above the lake provides a perfect location for the park's 63 campsites and an ideal staging point for two idyllic hiking trails.
Granted, Prelude Lake is a relatively busy place when compared to other Ingraham Trail locations. Not only does the campground have the highest average daily occupancy rate in the territory at 61 per cent, there are 32 full-time private residences in the park in addition to 100 or more seasonal cabins also dotting the landscape. But in the great scheme of things, considering the congestion and hassle one encounters in other parks south of the 60th parallel, the situation at Prelude is far from being a woebegone state.
Still, the GNWT is at a crossroads when it comes to park access in the Yellowknife area. The Department of Industry, Tourism and Investment has been timidly tackling the need for more camping opportunities during the last several years but it clearly has not been enough. The department's own Prelude Lake draft management plan indicates the daily occupancy rate at the park has jumped by 90 per cent since 2009. The GNWT has been aggressively promoting NWT parks to tourists - not a bad thing - but Yellowknife residents remain by far the largest user group at Prelude Lake, and the two other area parks at Long Lake and Reid Lake. This leaves city dwellers frustrated when it comes to the growing demand for limited camping opportunities.
Over the last four years the government's response has been to take 40 popular, full-season campsites - used almost exclusively by Yellowknifers - and turn them into 80 half-season campsites, ensuring nobody would be happy. Add to that the decision to build another loop of 18 campsites where it was least needed, at Reid Lake Territorial Park - 65 km from Yellowknife. Meanwhile, a plan to build an RV park in or around Yellowknife to relieve tourism pressure on nearby Fred Henne Territorial Park - by far the busiest location, accounting for nearly one third of all 24,323 NWT park visits in 2009 - has long since succumbed to not-in-my-backyard political pressure.
The GNWT's proposal for upgrades at Prelude Lake is long overdue. The plan to add an additional 15 campsites is bound to be controversial to permanent residents who complain the park is busy enough as it is. Other upgrades, however, such as replacing the dock and expanding the wholly inadequate marina parking lot will surely be met with widespread approval.
Yellowknifer would also argue, as it has several times in the past, that the GNWT should add additional campground loops at Fred Henne in conjunction with the construction of the Ingraham Trail bypass route around Giant Mine. This would seem a logical step, which the GNWT has acknowledged, considering that the new road will run next door to the park.
In any event, ITI has chosen this Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Tree of Peace Building as the date to hear from the public on its proposals for Prelude Lake. People interested in Prelude Lake park and camping in general should attend this meeting and make themselves heard, or e-mail the government with suggestions if they can't be there on Sunday.
This is an opportunity to let the GNWT know how important it is for Yellowknife residents to have an adequate number of camping sites available at a reasonable distance from the city. Other alternatives, like building a cabin, are not an option due to ongoing land claims.
Hopefully this is the year the territorial government takes Yellowknifers' camping needs seriously and acts on them.
Having a liquor ban in place during the holidays, and crediting it for why people behave themselves, is a mug's game.
The problem with the approach is, of course, some people don't always behave themselves, liquor ban or no liquor ban.
In Rankin Inlet, the RCMP admitted the annual ban on obtaining a permit to order booze from Dec. 21 to Jan. 3 had no effect in slowing down calls to the police.
The number and types of calls the police received during the holiday season didn't change at all.
And it may not change next year or the year after that. Then again, it may.
And, if so, does that mean the import ban is magically effective again?
Of course not, because the import ban has absolutely nothing to do with how people behave during the holiday season or any other time of year.
There's but one group of people in a community who benefit from any type of liquor ban and you can find them under the B for bootleggers. If you believe hamlet council's ban on ordering liquor for a certain period of time truly keeps booze out of your community, you must also believe, by extension, nobody underage drinks in Canada.
It's the law, right?
And it's a law passed by a government with considerably more power than our local hamlet councils. Yet, every weekend, pretty much anywhere in Canada, a percentage of underage teenagers roam around with a snoot full.
Some studies suggest liquor bans can actually set the table for binge drinking.
As the police will attest, people will, in fact, place large liquor orders close to the ban deadline.
Many do it with the intention of having enough to make just a little merry throughout the holiday season.
But booze is no different than anything else. When there's an excessive amount of something, people will use more of it.
Bring the price of bootleg liquor into the picture, and people act more radically.
They mix their drinks stronger, if at all, and drink faster because at that cost, they want their money's worth.
Unfortunately, with hard liquor, that's almost always a volatile cocktail that ends with someone getting hurt and/or getting to wear a shiny new pair of bracelets for a little while during the holidays.
When you look at it from those two perspectives, holiday booze bans don't seem quite so compelling. Good people sometimes make bad mistakes, so there are always exceptions, but police in most jurisdictions, when they're in the mood to be forthcoming with the facts, will tell you they pretty much deal with the same five per cent of the community during the holidays as they do any other time of year.
Some folks just don't get it and they never will.
But the vast majority of people in wet communities are responsible folks who can have a few drinks - and even a couple too many on occasion - and not get on the wrong side of the law or their family.
In the end, whether one wants to accept it or not, it all boils down to human behaviour, and some humans choose to behave badly.
Oh for the cure to dumb behaviour to be as simple as passing a motion!
Dene National Chief Bill Erasmus came out firing at Prime Minister Stephen Harper last week, stating that if Chief Theresa Spence, of Attawapiskat, Ont., dies on her hunger strike it will cause tensions between Canada and its indigenous peoples comparable to the 1990s Oka crisis.
That clash in Quebec was a violent land dispute between a Mohawk band and the Canadian government. Erasmus went so far as to suggest the prime minister might be in danger if the Ontario chief dies. Although Erasmus' comments drew very little reaction, he may be right about the potential explosiveness of the situation. It can be argued that Canada's relationship with aboriginal populations is at an all-time low. Tensions are not only being fuelled by Harper's initial decision not to meet with Spence but by recent pressure from the United Nations for Canada to improve the rights of aboriginal people. Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird's office helped fan the flames when it ridiculously stated that the United Nations had no business wasting its resources on countries such as Canada. Fortunately, Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Duncan doesn't display the same political buffoonery as his counterpart. Duncan, at least, has expressed concern for Spence's health and has offered to meet her in person or speak to her by phone. Canada can no longer sweep these issues under the rug, tack the corners down and ask people not to look, hoping the problem will disappear. Low education levels, poor nutrition and diabetes, poverty, inadequate housing, addictions, and a host of other issues plague aboriginal communities across the country. This predicament has divided the country. On one side there are those who blame chiefs and other indigenous leaders for fiscal mismanagement. On the flip side, others say the Canadian government has for too long ignored aboriginal rights and allowed near-Third-World conditions to persist. Idle No More protests are being held in communities in every province and territory, ranging from marches to blockades of major transportation routes. The movement is being supported by aboriginals and non-aboriginals alike. We have reached a boiling point and the anger is real. Here in Yellowknife hundreds marched in support over the Christmas break, sporting signs such as "Moosehide tanners against fascism." In the south, signs reading "Nazi Canada" and "Racist Canada" have also popped up. Spence has become the figurehead of the movement and if her broth-based hunger strike causes her health concerns, or worse, if she were to die, the movement will have a martyr. Martyrs have the power to inspire extremism and then diffusing the situation will become much more difficult. A violent backlash might follow. It is time for Canada to swallow its pride and recognize that this grassroots problem requires a grassroots solution. Harper must step up and show his leadership by agreeing to meet with Spence and other aboriginal leaders. It is time for a nationwide summit between aboriginal leaders and the federal government to find solutions and review concerns associated with the omnibus bills, which cram aboriginal legislation in with broader economic law. Our country stands divided and it is our prime minister's responsibility to broker peace. In fact, at this point, it is his duty to do that. Word came Friday that Harper will meet with a delegation of First Nations chiefs on Jan. 11. He must seize the chance to begin mending relations.
The cost of safety Nunavut News/North - Monday, January 7, 2013 The death of six-month-old Isaac Appaqaq in a Dec. 22 plane crash was tragic beyond words. Worse yet is to imagine his mother's grief, having her son ripped from her arms by the force of the plane's violent crash landing. The only way to prevent this from happening again is to apply the same safety standards to infants as are already in place for other passengers - they must be buckled in their own seats. When a plane travelling hundreds of kilometres an hour comes to an abrupt halt, anything unsecured inside the aircraft keeps travelling at a high rate of speed. This is the reason baggage is stowed securely in overhead storage bins or under passengers' seats upon takeoffs and landings. It's time we stop letting safety standards slide when it comes to our children. This is by no means a simple fix. Air travel in Nunavut is exceedingly expensive, and surely being able to avoid purchasing a second plane ticket - which can easily cost $1,000 apiece - for the first year or two of a child's life is a necessity for some parents, many of whom opt instead to just hold their child on their lap during the flight. Considering other alternatives, standard plane seats are not designed for infants. Airlines should consider having child seats available for their youngest passengers. Though incidents such as the one in Sanikiluaq have not been common, the risk is always there. The risks of flying in the North have been underscored by recent accidents such as the First Air crash that killed 12 passengers in Resolute in August 2011, as well as two smaller aircraft crashes in Yellowknife that same year. Fierce winter weather adds another hazard. The factors leading to the crash in Sanikiluaq are not yet public, and depending on what happened, other steps toward safer flying might be necessary. Even before the investigation is concluded, it would be advisable to begin making flying safer for infants. The arms of a human, no matter how much love exists in their clutch, are just not reliable enough to be able to keep a child secure.
College needs can-do attitude Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, January 4, 2013
It is also somewhat surprising that, in an interview with Yellowknifer last month which centred on her appointment to the leadership position, Arychuk said there have been a number of false starts in attempting to establish an independent campus in Yellowknife and that lease payments for the current location, at Northern United Place (NUP), could have been used to buy a building. The college has had a long tenure at NUP, but the venue is shared with residences for seniors and students have restricted space for pursuing their studies. With 16 classrooms, four labs and one library, the new president admits there is little room for students to work in groups, move around freely and find a calm environment to concentrate. It's time for Aurora College to focus in earnest on the task of creating a "stand-alone campus in our capital city that looks like a college-university campus," as Arychuk said. To accomplish this, might we suggest dedicated college administrators in Yellowknife employ the same techniques they have used to engage industry in the past, such as the development of a program to train underground workers for the diamond mines. Perhaps success will be found by engaging representatives of government, the city and industry to sit on a committee and develop a vision for a Northern-based science institute and educational/training facility? That project would include seeking endowments, developing work-placement programs and working closely with industry to develop and deliver programs that provide graduates with jobs. Every effort should be made to keep secondary students in the North to further their education, and we can move in that direction by creating a post-secondary facility that rivals what is offered in other parts of Canada.
Second life for legion Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, January 4, 2013 After a wobbly couple of years, Yellowknife's Royal Canadian Legion is back in the black and doing what it does best: advocating for veterans and raising money for charity. There was a time, as was the case in many communities across Canada, when the legion hall was the beating heart of Yellowknife's social life. Back in its heyday, a legion membership was a prized honour when military service was commonly a young man or woman's first step out of high school. As late as 2005, the Vincent Massey branch here in Yellowknife was cutting $50,000 cheques for Facilities for Kids to help pay for the gymnastics club's Styrofoam landing pit in the Multiplex's gymnasium. All told, the Yellowknife legion donated more than $1 million to community charities between 2003 and 2008. But city residents then suddenly learned the legion was in financial trouble and its building was up for sale. Yellowknife's legion managed to survive, although it is a tad smaller these days. It no longer owns the building it called home for more than 30 years but at least the bills are paid. And now the institution is back helping the community with donations, including $5,000 raised for the army cadets since October. This is great news, for the legion still plays an important role in educating Canadians of the importance of military service. The key is youth membership, without which there is no future. Membership rules are more relaxed these days. One doesn't have to be a Canadian Armed Forces veteran or from the merchant navy anymore to become a member. But the legion still faces a difficult road ahead because most young people's only experience with combat today is in a video game. Getting proactive and staying visible while reminding young Canadians of Canada's crucial role in military and peacekeeping efforts around the world is the only way to maintain the organization's relevancy.
New Year's wishes for the Deh Cho Editorial Comment by Roxanna Thompson Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, January 3, 2013 Everyone knows about New Year's resolutions, but if there were New Year's wishes instead, there are a few things that the region should be hoping for. Related to an article in this week's edition, one of the wishes near the top of the list should be progress on the Prairie Creek Mine. Canadian Zinc Corporation expects 2013 to be the year it gets the necessary permits to start production at the mine site. Resource development projects are few and far between in the Deh Cho as are opportunities that will lead to significant job creation. Not everyone agrees with the Prairie Creek Mine, but it is currently the best hope the region has for economic development. The Dehcho Process should also be high on the New Year's wish list. So many outstanding issues, such as which land can be developed and with what kind of development, could be answered if the Dehcho Process, along with a connected Dehcho Land Use Plan, were finished and agreed upon by the Dehcho First Nations, and territorial and federal governments. As wishes go, however, this one is a real doozy. There are many unsettled topics that would have to be concluded and compromises that would have to be made for even an agreement-in-principle to be reached. Then there would be the struggle of getting all of the members of the Dehcho First Nations to agree to what has been negotiated. It's a long-shot wish. As a side note to the Dehcho Process wish, there should be an additional wish that Pehdzeh Ki First Nation rejoin the process. A number of leaders from the region expressed sympathy for the reasons the First Nation from Wrigley gave for leaving, but that doesn't change the fact that there is strength in numbers and a united front when dealing with the federal government. A final wish, which covers a broader basis, should be made for the individuals, families and communities who are struggling with social problems. Across the region, there are ongoing issues related to drug and alcohol use and other forms of abuse. If wishes could really fix problems, it would be nice to see healing take place in troubled lives so communities in the Deh Cho can become healthier, happier places to live in the New Year. Regardless of whether these wishes come true, hopefully the year ahead holds lots of promise for the Deh Cho. Hourly fees a necessary expense Editorial Comment by Miranda Scotland Inuvik Drum - Thursday, January 3, 2013 The authority has created an interim policy that will be used while the members work on a final draft. The biggest difference between the new document and the old is that user groups, such as the adult volleyball league and the basketball team, who use the facilities in the evening will have to pay $35 an hour for access. The charge will not apply to student activities. The extra funds, Harder said, will be used to cover the cost of having a security guard. In the past the IDEA has had issues with uninvited guests entering Samuel Hearne Secondary School and Sir Alexander Mackenzie School after hours while user groups were accessing the facilities. Some of the visitors wreaked havoc on the buildings. This should no longer be a problem at East 3 School, with the introduction of a security guard, according to Harder. It is hard to argue against the merits of having someone keeping an eye on the property given the cost of the building and the expensive materials inside. It would be nice to believe that everyone in the community could be trusted to do no harm but past experience shows that isnt the case. In September, the food bank was broken into, bottles of spaghetti sauce were smashed, boxes of pasta were open with their contents strewn across the room, and lightbulbs from their fixtures and smashed. If there are residents willing to trash a charitable organization then nowhere is safe. The question is, however, should user groups bear the cost for the guard? We say yes, because if the teams weren't using the facility the school could lock up for the evening and a security person wouldn't be necessary to monitor who is entering the building. Also, $35 per hour is a fairly reasonable price. If a team used the facility for two hours once a week from September to June it would cost them about $3,010. For groups of 10, that would equal out to $7 a person per night. It's the cost of lunch, really. Unfortunately, that price becomes less affordable with smaller groups. For that reason, I hope the IDEA will work with any groups that can't afford the full cost. People shouldn't be discouraged from getting fit.
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