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Coming clean Groenewegen-style
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, February 20, 2015

Hay River South MLA Jane Groenewegen wanted to "come clean" in the legislative assembly earlier this month regarding her fiery interest in the future of Northland Utilities -- Yellowknife's de facto power supply monopoly.

Groenewegen said her interest in the company was motivated by her interest in her constituency which counts the utility company as a major employer and community supporter.

But as Yellowknifer reported last week, "What the Hay River South MLA failed to mention in her statement to the legislative assembly ... is that her long-time constituency assistant, Wendy Morgan, is married to Duane Morgan, the company's Yellowknife manager."

Is this a simple oversight? After all, as well as promoting the company's important role to her constituency's economy, she did not fail to name two company managers who make their homes in Hay River and Fort Providence.

Innocent oversight or not, Yellowknife Centre MLA Robert Hawkins was correct to state the full story of Groenewegen's interests were not laid bare when she supposedly came clean.

This matters because citizens have to believe their elected leaders are acting in the best interest of those who voted them in. While no one can criticize Groenewegen's concern for a major Hay River employer and the company's employees, she is open to criticism for failing to disclose any and all potential personal connections to the company.

Failure to do this casts the suspicion that even her sworn duty to represent the interests of her constituents could be influenced by her personal relationships, whether directly or indirectly, as in this case where a close associate is married to a company manager.

This isn't just ink on a page. The Town of Hay River recently announced its interest in cancelling its contract with Northland Utilities because of skyrocketing power rates.

A reasonable person has to assume Hay River town councillors have not only the cash-in-pocket interests of the town and its citizens at heart, but also the interests of community members who work for Northland Utilities.

If it's clear to Hay River town council there is reason to question the future of the monopoly, why is Groenewegen so fiercely against the same question on a territorial level?

We don't need to belabour that this is not the first time Groenewegen has been caught up in questions surrounding conflict of interest.

It's too bad she didn't take the lesson fully to heart when in 2001, as deputy premier, the NWT conflict-of-interest commissioner ruled her in violation of conflict of interest law.

She may have good reason to defend the monopoly, but when coming clean leaves out a personal connection to company management, we are being asked to drink the bathwater and call it crystal clear spring water.


Mine progress positive sign
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, February 19, 2015

It's not the rosiest time to be in the metals mining industry.

Despite a generally favourable outlook, commodity prices for things like lead, zinc and silver have slumped since 2011.

As the value has dropped so have stock prices for the companies trying to extract the metals.

That's the case for Canadian Zinc Corporation which owns the Prairie Creek mine northwest of Nahanni Butte.

The mine has a long history behind it and it hasn't even reached production stage yet.

There have been legal battles and starts and stops on the road to production.

Last year the company, after raising money, announced it would begin its underground program to move the mine closer to production.

In recent weeks, it has pumped the water from a tunnel which will allow more work to begin.

An outdated study is being revised so company executives can go to potential lenders and make a stronger case about the value of the metals underground.

The funds raised are said to be enough to cover the current work and then more will be needed.

Hopefully, Canadian Zinc can use the report results to secure more money to move the project ahead.

With the territorial books near what the finance minister describes as a "fiscal cliff" and production at diamond mines expected to dip over the coming years, there's a lot of potential riding on further development at Prairie Creek.

While careful monitoring of such projects is an absolute must to protect land and water, we hope Prairie Creek can move along toward extracting its resources.

While there are certainly environmental issues to closely examine when it comes to mining, especially in a national park, the business does bring benefits to the North.

Right now, more than a dozen people are working at Prairie Creek and the company has committed to hiring as many people as possible.

Community leaders should ensure that commitment is upheld.

An operational mine would support more jobs which in turn would support communities in the region over the estimated 11-year life span of the mine.


Athletes learned lifelong lessons
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, February 19, 2015

Last week some 200 athletes from eight communities in the Beaufort-Delta region kicked, reached, jumped, snaked and jigged for two days of competition at East Three School.

The Northern Games Summit brought together students of all ages to participate in a variety of traditional games. In its third year, the games have become an important event for school-aged children. It's an opportunity for youth to connect with their culture, interact with elders, meet new people, and build a strong sense of community. The spirit of the games centres around friendship, encouragement and a positive space where youth can be themselves, thrive at what they know, and learn more about what they may not. I spoke regularly with lead organizers Sharla Greenland, Colin Phybus and Jill Nugent, students, and the many volunteers who put hundreds of hours into making the event a success.

Volunteers are the backbone of this community. On a regular basis people step up and offer support to help make events like the Northern Games Summit happen. Games officials who spent countless hours judging athletes were always smiling and engaged with the youth. In the kitchen, students and teachers worked almost non-stop to feed the students throughout the three-day event. Even after long hours and nearing the end of the summit, everyone, despite being tired, was happy to be there.

Students showed the utmost respect for those giving their time to the games, shaking hands, offering thanks, and showing they were open to learning from those with knowledge and wisdom. When an athlete was struggling, they clapped and cheered. If they were eliminated, high-fives, hugs and words of encouragement weren't far behind.

Events like the Northern Games Summit are crucial to youth success. By bringing together students from across the region, youth are not only able to learn more about the traditional games and culture that is embedded in their daily lives, but to learn life-long lessons and skills - problem-solving, confidence, determination - that will shape them as they carve their path in the world.

The enthusiasm shown by everyone involved in the event was incredible. If students didn't know the underlying goals of what the summit hoped to instill in them, by the time students got their medals during the closing ceremonies, many understood. It wasn't just about the one-foot high kick, the snow snake, Animal Muk or the bench reach.

It was the intangible growth, the character development that will have a longer-lasting effect on each and every participant. When they reflect on their time at the games in the future, they'll see what they learned and be grateful for the opportunity to have experienced the beauty of the summit.


Keep tabs on the cash
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, February 18, 2015

With Finance Minister Michael Miltenberger predicting tough times ahead in his budget address, we should all be closely following the approach Range Lake MLA Daryl Dolynny has taken in calling on cabinet to justify expenses.

"Most residents would agree the Government of the Northwest Territories has an obligation to support and promote, both globally and nationally, an open-for-business position. This is a given. But it's the blurred line of government travel that always has to be put in perspective," said Dolynny in the legislative assembly.

The question must be asked: Why $750,000 for travel to China, Japan and Ottawa? Dolynny suggested it could have gone to assist the junior kindergarten rollout but there are any number of worthwhile projects. Sahtu MLA Norman Yakeleya pointed out that the cost of a trade mission to encourage Chinese and Japanese investment might have gone to improve the living conditions of Tulita nurses living in rodent-infested homes.

"Somehow we find $300,000 to promote investments in the NWT but at the same time we can't take care of our basic, essential health-care workers in our small communities," he said.

Every time cabinet finds money for one project, it takes away from another cause, whether its reallocating money already in the budget or borrowing $20 million to avoid a 3.7 per cent power rate hike.

Priorities are based on values and that means they're usually up for debate.

But surprise announcements -- such as the premier's mention of an all-weather road estimated to cost $300 million and a study looking at an energy, transportation and communications corridor along the Mackenzie Valley -- squash that debate.

Cabinet controls the purse strings and is therefore responsible for making the calls but the ministers should also be transparent when doing so.

In light of the budget address Miltenberger gave with the most recent territorial budget, this discussion is only going to get more important.

"We have been spending everything that we receive. This can work when revenues are growing but with a forecast of flat revenue growth over the medium term we need to make sure our expenditures grow in line with our revenues," said Miltenberger.

In times of plenty, decisions become less difficult with fewer immediate consequences on the horizon. That may not always be the case.

Cabinet should see transparency as best practice and a failure to be transparent as a missed opportunity to get proper public input.


Downtown businesses need more support, not taxes
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, February 18, 2015

A proposal to form a business improvement district is not going to happen because there are not enough businesses to support it.

Coun. Adrian Bell once again floated the idea of creating a downtown business district last week. His vision calls for a designated zone where taxes apart from the property taxes they already pay would be used to fund services such security, beautification and marketing.

It was shot down by Yellowknife Chamber of Commerce executive director Deneen Everett, who reported a majority of businesses surveyed rejected the idea.

Bell has been pushing this idea since 2012, when he proposed a lobby group be formed to speak on behalf of downtown merchants to city council.

While a business improvement district may have merit elsewhere, especially in communities with a business base large enough to make the scheme worthwhile, it would in all likelihood be too much of a burden for downtown merchants. The core is simply not big enough to make much of a dent on fixing downtown. More likely, an improvement tax would only accelerate their closure and exodus to the suburbs. The central character in the city's quest to revitalize downtown is Centre Square Mall.

Until this split ownership group from down south gets its act together, any additional enhancement efforts are moot. As it stands, the two mall owners, Huntingdon Capital Corporation and Royal Host, seem entirely unphased by its dwindling number of tenants and a blocked off entrance to keep out vagrants.

The city can squeeze the remaining downtown small businesses all it wants but until the Centre Square owners are doing their part, a business improvement district is pointless. Bell should be commended for bringing ideas to the table while others remain silent. But downtown businesses would be better off spending their money on themselves and make their own improvements.


Pushing for a sequel
Editorial Comment by Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, February 18, 2015


I appreciate everything former Rankin Inlet deputy mayor Sam Tutanuak had to say in a public farewell story I had the privilege to write in this past week's edition (The calm after the storm, Feb. 11, Kivalliq News).

I could relate to a number of things he said about stress and the toll it can take on one's overall health.

Yet I still have an empty feeling in regard to the situation and a compelling sense of some unfinished business with Tutanuak.

The odds are high the public will never know the true chain of events that went down from the time Nunavut MP Leona Aglukkaq picked up the phone in Ottawa and called the Hamlet of Rankin Inlet in regards to a piece Tutanuak took part in on an APTN-produced TV show.

The now infamous piece, in Rankin at least, insinuated a number of elders made a practice of scavenging the local dump for food.

The rest is, as they say, history.

For all the he-said, she-said attributes of this fiasco -- played out so dramatically and sucked bone dry by southern media -- there is only one certainty we are left with.

Both the community and the Municipality of Rankin Inlet lost a darn fine man!

They say time is a healer.

If that's so, despite the finality in his words and tone this past week, hopefully, the day will come when Tutanuak reconsiders his position.

The one part of his spiel this humble scribe will never be able to agree with, is Tutanuak's contention that it's OK not to be the voice speaking up.

But it's not OK. We have precious few in Kivalliq, or across Nunavut for that matter, unafraid to speak up and ask tough questions for fear of reprisals from the powers that be.

And that small number of people does not go up much when we include our politicians.

That's why the loss of a politician or community leader who has demonstrated honesty and integrity throughout his political career is such a serious blow.

We simply don't have many options to draw from in our perilously low political talent pool, especially at the municipal level.

All politicians, good or bad, occasionally rely upon theatrics to make a point.

Aglukkaq reading the daily papers while the food issue in Rankin Inlet was being discussed in Parliament was exactly that -- theatrics.

And, although she apologized for the move later (sort of), there can be no denying the effectiveness of the picture it provided us.

As insensitive as it may have been, the Nunavut MP casually reading the paper sent a message loud and clear on just how much credibility she gave the APTN report.

Unfortunately, there were no theatrics involved with Tutanuak's thoughts this past week.

As always, he was honest and sincere in expressing his thoughts on how he truly felt at that particular point in time.

Yet, he cannot change the man he is, and he is a man who cares deeply about his community and those who call Nunavut home.

Tutanuak has some teeth-grinding days awaiting him in his life away from the public spotlight.

And should the day ever come he decides to change his mind about politics, that would be a sequel worth watching for.


The shackles of bureaucracy
Northwest Territories/News North - Monday, February 16, 2015

Soon after arriving by ambulance to Stanton Territorial Hospital on Nov. 4, 2009, Allisdair Leishman wandered into the hospital's kitchen, found a knife and stabbed himself in the chest.

To this day he remains in long-term care at the hospital, brain damaged, unable to speak and physically disabled.

How he was able to stray from the care of hospital staff, make it to the kitchen, get his hands on a knife and injure himself all remain a mystery his mother, Margaret Leishman, who has spent the past six years imploring the Department of Health and Social Services (HSS) to provide some answers.

Leishman understandably wants to know the details of the chain of events that led to her son to injure himself while under the care of the health authority.

She also wants to know why the recommendations from the report were never acted upon and why hospital security to this day can't physically intervene in violent confrontations.

While these requests seem simple to fulfill, Health and Social Services Minister Glen Abernethy assures Leishman - and the rest of us - it's not so simple. In fact, he says, he requires a hefty bureaucratic arsenal to tackle the problem.

Abernethy talks about a working group that will develop a framework to deal with security issues at Stanton. Or maybe it's that he's building a framework to form a working group. Somewhere in there, he's thrown in a dash of 'strategic plan.'

To this day, none of the department's strategic plans, frameworks or working groups have equated to action.

In fact, this array of bureaucratic arsenal Abernethy touts actually seems more like the hefty weight of shackles that keep the minister from enacting change.

Abernethy is a minister, the boss. He has the power to at the very least require Stanton to hire security guards that do the one fundamental thing they are, by definition, mandated to do - provide security.

And when he's unshackled himself from his department's robust supply of policies and procedures, he could also ease a mother's pain and share the information he has on what happened to her son.


Good initiative doesn't go far enough
Northwest Territories/News North - Monday, February 16, 2015

Last week John Colford, manager of traditional economics, agriculture and fisheries for the territorial government touted fish as the "worst kept secret of Great Slave Lake."

On the contrary, fish has to be the lake's best kept secret as the Department of Industry, Tourism and Investment is rolling out a new program to let the market know there's good fish in that water and it's available for purchase.

To let the world know, ITI is slapping an NWT logo on local fish packaging so consumers know they are "getting the freshest product."

According to a September 2014 Yellowknifer story, branding isn't the problem. A Yellowknife chef, who asked not to be named, bemoaned at the time the fact he sells Kazhakstani zander in lieu of Great Slave pickerel because, he said, local fishers aren't catching a reliable supply of pickerel.

According Colford at the time, the problem isn't that fishers aren't catching enough pickerel, it's that there aren't enough fishers on the lake.

According to Colford's numbers, just over a third of the available Class A and class B fishing vessel certificates were spoken for in 2013.

A good brand will arguably push product, fatten fishers' wallets and maybe even convince a few more would-be commercial anglers to get a piece of the piscine action.

But what is the GNWT doing to help fishers expand their operations so they can compete with Kazhakstani behemoths who can undercut local fishermen, sometimes by half?

Stickers and the official NWT whitefish cookbook the government plans to publish with recipes it received last weekend in return for free fresh fish last week are wonderful things.

But any expectation local fishers will be able to turn their likely negligible rise in profits to expand to the point the local market needs is just as silly as claiming Great Slave Lake's fish is, in any way, a secret.


Hockey commentator reflects racism and ignorance
Nunavut/News North - Monday, February 16, 2015

Despite being labelled "savages and barbarians," Inuit families have been eating healthy seal meat for thousands of years.

Inuit families will still be eating seal meat when the word "cherry" once again makes people think not of bitter bigotry, but of the tiny, sweet little fruit that it is.

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