CLASSIFIEDSADVERTISINGSPECIAL ISSUESONLINE SPORTSOBITUARIESNORTHERN JOBSTENDERS

NNSL Photo/Graphic

NNSL Photo/Graphic
Editorial Cartoons

Subscriber pages
buttonspacer News Desk
buttonspacer Columnists
buttonspacer Editorial
buttonspacer Readers comment
buttonspacer Tenders

Demo pages
Here's a sample of what only subscribers see

Subscribe now
Subscribe to both hardcopy or internet editions of NNSL publications

Advertising
Our print and online advertising information, including contact detail.

Home page text size buttonsbigger textsmall textText size


Don't forget North in violence strategy
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Women in the North face unique challenges when trying to escape violence. This was the message YWCA executive director Lyda Fuller made clear to Status of Women Minister Patty Hajdu earlier this month while the federal cabinet minister was in town gathering information ahead of a new federal strategy to combat gender-based violence.

Fuller rightfully asked for a strategy specifically tailored to the North and painted a compelling picture as to why. The North is isolated, there are fewer tools and support systems available for people who need to escape abusive situations and indigenous people - especially women -- suffer violence at the highest rates in Canada.

To complicate matters further, some of the mechanisms available to women just don't work in the North, especially in remote communities.

For example, Fuller said the YWCA recommends people in communities that lack RCMP detachments avoid filing emergency protection orders against abusive partners because there is nobody there to enforce them. In fact, protection orders may actually end up exacerbating an abusive situation.

"People have been forced out of communities because of that," she told Yellowknifer.

Fuller's career has been spent working with women in vulnerable situations in the North, so she - and her organization - have no doubt developed a specific set of practices through trial and error.

It's only logical that the YWCA play a role in whatever strategy comes out of these consultations, so hopefully Hajdu considers funding frontline organizations such as the YWCA.

Fuller and her colleagues in the field have the experience to know what works and what doesn't. What they need now is money so they can do what works.

It's important that Hajdu keeps Fuller's advice in mind when developing the federal strategy.

If the North is going to combat gender-based violence, there will need to be a specific, well-funded, made-for-the-North component for it to be worthwhile up here.


Bizarre secrecy over city board
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, September 21, 2016

The fate of the Robertson Headframe is to be decided early next month by the city's Development Appeal Board.

Strangely enough, the city insisted on keeping the board's membership secret last week, despite the fact its members are publicly appointed by council.

City spokesperson Nalini Naidoo explained to Yellowknifer, "For the purpose of media inquiry, the position of the members ... are important, not their contact names/information as members are not to be contacted by the media."

Yellowknifer had no intention of contacting these people but for the purpose of transparency wanted to publish their names, as they make up the publicly appointed board that will make a decision on the appeal.

So, Yellowknifer sifted through council minutes to determine their names and published them in the Sept. 16 edition of the newspaper.

The board is public, the municipal government is democratic, and the city's development appeal process is designed to be transparent. So why in the world would the city's communications team think it's appropriate to be secretive about this?

There are moments when government secrecy just becomes ridiculous, and this was one of those moments.

Transparency legislation currently doesn't encompass municipal governments in the NWT and the territorial government is currently considering legislation to change that.

It's sad to think it would be required but needless obstinacy such as this really doesn't serve as a vote of confidence that the city government values transparency.


Going against the Maple Leaf
Editorial Comment by Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, September 21, 2016

As a "hockey guy," it's been a lot of fun listening to all the chatter in hockey mad Rankin Inlet concerning the World Cup of Hockey during the past few weeks.

As you read this, there are two days remaining in the round-robin segment to determine which teams will advance to the playoffs.

I must point out, and emphatically so, that I was not one of the hockey purists bemoaning the fact Team North America and Team Europe are gimmick teams with no real flag.

In fact, it was quite the opposite with me.

I was excited and intrigued by the concept of a team playing in this incredible tourney comprised of players 23 years of age or younger.

And, at the risk of being "saluted" by a number of hockey fans across the region, I let my excitement get the better of me to the point where I decided I was a Team North America fan for this event (sorry, Team Canada).

The young bucks on the North America squad have firepower to burn, both among their forwards and their defencemen, and I can easily see this team outscoring its opposition to the tune of 7-6 and 6-5 during the round robin.

Never being one to hedge my bets or hide myself from ridicule (keep in mind the tournament had yet to start as I wrote this), I go on record as saying I will be more than a little surprised if Team North America isn't still standing when the playoffs begin.

I also find it more than a little interesting that Team North America is in Group B, and finds itself up against Russia, Sweden and Finland.

All strong teams, yet, the fact my young charges are in with three European squads takes some of the sting out of not cheering for the Canadian crest this time around.

So, of course, my dream championship best-of-three series would have Team Canada playing the young guns of North America.

Canada is joined in Group A by the Czech Republic, Team Europe and Team U.S.A., and, as powerful as the Canadian lineup may be, Carey Price is suspect in goal, having missed much of the previous NHL season, and any of those teams is capable of an upset on any given day.

Being a lovable loser of a Toronto Maple Leafs fan, I was eagerly anticipating seeing how Auston Matthews and Morgan Rielly fare against such top-level talent.

Yes, there are Maple Leafs on other rosters, but Matthews is "the saviour," and, if he's for real, he and Rielly could be the Leafs version of a famous Oilers pair from the past in quick order (dare I dream).

As most of the talk around Kivalliq water coolers has correctly pointed out, the Achilles heel of Team North America may be its somewhat green defence corps and its ability to fend off the best goal snipers the world has to offer over the entire round robin.

But a lot of mistakes can be turned away with Cup champion Matt Murray and Ducks stalwart John Gibson patrolling the crease.

Add to that the firepower expected to be provided by the likes of Matthews, Jonathan Drouin, Jack Eichel, Johnny Gaudreau, Dylan Larkin, Nathan MacKinnon, Connor McDavid, Sean Monahan and company, and things could get interesting for this young team in a hurry.

At the end of the day, most people remember who won, not by how much.

So, fellow Kivalliq puck heads, game on!


Does Canada give North cold shoulder?
Northwest Territories/News North - Monday, September 12, 2016

During a rough point in the history of Canada's federation in the 1980s, Calgary mayor Ralph Klein said, "Let the eastern bastards freeze in the dark."

A few decades later and the argument is being made that Ottawa is leaving the North to freeze in the dark.

Sure, we've had lots of lip-service paid by the federal government - not to mention plenty of parades through the NWT by cabinet ministers and prime ministers - but are we any better off than a few decades ago?

Maclean's magazine columnist Scott Gilmore recently wrote, "We are not a Northern nation, and we need to stop lying to ourselves that we are."

In the Sept. 11 column titled, "The North and the great Canadian lie," Gilmore writes Canada needs to stop pretending it cares about the North.

Noting the lion's share of Canadians live as far south in the country as they can, and being one of the wealthiest, healthiest, most successful nations on the planet, he suggests Canada "maybe doesn't need the North."

Gilmore adds: A lack of development and health infrastructure has created serious social problems and our mineral wealth is hobbled due to inadequate means to get ore to markets.

On another front, look at the state of the Canadian Rangers, our under-equipped volunteer militia, the backbone of our national military presence in the North.

As reported in the last edition of News/North, the feds have announced a contract for 6,820 new rifles to replace the Rangers' Second World War Lee Enfield rifles starting next year.

That's a sad measure of the investment Canada has put into backing our already shaky sovereignty claim.

Canada's Northern Strategy, launched in 2007, was a weak document to begin with as it contained no firm plans or timelines for solidifying that claim.

The current cap-in-hand stance the GNWT takes with Ottawa was recently characterized by Infrastructure Minister Robert C. McLeod, at a joint announcement of $51.7 million for water and wastewater projects in the NWT. The territory will have to pony up 25 per cent of the cost of each project.

"Any opportunity we have to access any federal dollars for any project in the NWT big or small we take advantage of this," McLeod said. "One of the things you learn as a representative of the NWT is to take advantage of money pots if we can get them."

The GNWT needs to be far more aggressive with Ottawa, especially during this first phase of the Liberals' promised 10-year infrastructure plan to repair aging roads, pipes and transit systems across the country.

Our hopes to move forward with just a portion of the Mackenzie Valley Highway towards the Northern coastline have already been put in park, as we now must wait for the second phase of the 10-year spending plan - which requires the Liberals to win the next federal election.

The second, more lucrative, phase of the Liberal infrastructure spending plan will address larger projects. And we have plenty of them.

Ottawa needs to hear loud and clear that we have no plans to freeze in the dark.


Shine bright lights on depressing topic
Nunavut/News North - Monday, September 19, 2016

It is well worth noting that while people across Canada marked World Suicide Prevention Day with events, publicity efforts and campaigns last week, there was a markedly different approach in Nunavut.

Here the territory held Embrace Life Day events, which included walks, cycling, a concert, a poster contest, a cake decorating contest, community barbecues and feasts.

As the name suggests, Nunavut is taking a proactive approach to addressing a major health issue with Embrace Life Day. Instead of focusing on prevention, the entire approach is positive, a method worthy of praise.

The usage of positive words is by design, first raised at the September 2015 coroner's inquest into the high rate of suicide where the government of Nunavut's director of Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, Shuvinai Mike, said that the use of the words "suicide prevention" is "not culturally relevant" and suggested terminology should be chosen by Inuit.

Mike suggested the word inuusiqatsiaqujigatta, which means "we want you to have a good life," saying it is more appropriate because efforts should be focused on the present and on promoting life.

A made-in-Nunavut approach encourages people to talk about mental health issues and to recognize it is up to people in the communities to help each other to cope with loss.

Finally, as a result of the recommendations made by the coroner's inquest, the Government of Nunavut has provided a significant amount of money towards getting those positive messages out into the public. As revealed during the inquest, there had been talk within the government and the Department of Health about the development of a suicide prevention strategy, but no money had been put toward those efforts.

Thankfully, that has changed. There is now a division within the Department of Health, titled Quality of Life, with its own associate deputy minister to implement other recommendations from the coroner's inquest, take comments made by those who gave testimony to heart and make a difference in the context of traditional Inuit values and principles.

The government followed up by creating new positions for mental-health workers and addictions counsellors. Many communities will have access to services offered by child and youth outreach specialists and psychiatric nurses.

The key to success is for all agencies to work together to develop trust between the people they are trying to help and the front-line workers. The partnership of Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., the Government of Nunavut, the RCMP and Isaksimagit Inuusirmi Katujjiqatigiit (Embrace Life Council) is intent on using the funds provided to reach people in need.

One of the most important methods is the offering of a two-day Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training course within the communities so that elders, school teachers, youth leaders and others can learn to recognize the signs and react in an appropriate manner.

We are optimistic that a well-funded, positive and proactive approach rooted in traditional values will show proven results when a full evaluation of progress is carried out.


Spending starts at home
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, September 16, 2016

The mining and resource industry is the largest private sector contributor to the NWT's GDP, so when that sector stumbles the North shudders.

Speakers at last week's Opportunities North conference highlighted the importance of economic diversification in the development of a robust economy less tied to the vagaries of international commodity markets.

Tourism was highlighted as a shining star in the North's economic constellation.

It's well and good that tourism spending has been on the upswing. Tourist and adventure market dollars are certainly something all levels of government should be pursuing. But another core industry easily overlooked for the lack of glamour associated with it is government spending.

It is not easy to parse out exactly what the value of government spending in the North amounts to, but it certainly represents more than a billion dollars annually.

While much of that is absorbed in salaries, administration and upkeep of public infrastructure, some of it is spent on goods and services provided by the private sector.

The NWT Chamber of Commerce carefully tracks resource sector spending and does a good job keeping its finger on the pulse of the private sector economy. But it needs to expand its vigilant gaze on the who, how much, and where of government private sector spending.

For example, the GNWT recently award a contract for close to 40 modular homes to NWT-based construction facilities.

Previous contracts for modular homes, which have become widely used in the communities for the cost savings involved, had gone to southern contractors who took the money, built the homes, and installed them in communities while giving almost zero benefit to the Northern economy. For example, according to MLA Shane Thompson, southern contractors would even bring their own food, fuel and accommodations to the communities instead of spending locally.

It may be that some sections of the North's private sector are not ready to handle government-sized contracts.

If that is the case, those areas should be identified as potential sources of further northern economic diversification and immediately targeted for development.


Phone calls for seniors may be lifeline
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, September 16, 2016

Isolation and loneliness are well-documented triggers for a host of mental health problems, including depression.

Seniors can be especially vulnerable if they have limited mobility, they've lost friends or family or relatives spend less time with them due to busy schedules.

It can be especially hard for Northern seniors. Many young people move away to pursue jobs and schooling in larger centres down south, leaving elderly parents and relatives who may not be keen on picking up and moving, especially if they lived most of their lives in the city.

One way to help seniors connect to the outside world is with a simple phone call. The Status of Women Council of the NWT is launching the Friendly Calls to Seniors program, where volunteers can phone up elders to chat with them, even for a few minutes, depending on what the volunteer and client agree upon.

The idea, according to council executive director Lorraine Phaneuf, is seniors really do appreciate hearing another person's voice and talking about things they have in common.

To make this program work, like a conversation, it needs people to speak up and volunteer, to be the callers and the called.

Yellowknifers skilled in the art of conversation should consider signing up, as should seniors who could use a little social time, even over the phone.

This is a case where a simple telephone line can be a lifeline.


Solutions needed
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, September 15, 2016

Anyone who has lived in one of the smaller communities in the Northwest Territories for any length of time knows the story: a friend has been couchsurfing for years, or a relative spends their summers on the street and seem to vanish in the winter.

Where the government seems to have failed on the issue of homelessness, the people of the North find their own solutions.

Homelessness in the Deh Cho is largely out of sight, out of mind. It's well-known that the issue doesn't take traditional forms - you generally won't find people without homes sleeping out on the street in the middle of winter.

But they are there. To think otherwise would be a mistake.

In Fort Providence, the Community Advancement Partnership Society has been raising money for the better part of a year in an effort to aid the situation.

The organization wants to build spaces for people who have no homes. It would be transitional housing, with members of the society helping clients to eventually get a regular housing unit.

One affiliate, Pat Mazerolle's FP Management & Consulting, compiled the data he has seen over the past nine months into a document for the NWT Housing Corporation's perusal.

The figures he cites, if applied anywhere else in the country, would be staggering. Mazerolle estimates between six to eight per cent of Fort Providence's adult population is homeless, hard-to-house or underhoused.

They couchsurf, live in shacks and abandoned buildings or pile into the units of friends and relatives.

The society has 13 people registered in its waiting list for housing already, when not a single bed is yet available.

Mazerolle said he is tired of the issue being swept under the rug. Every winter, he says, he hears people talk about the problem of homelessness - only to have it forgotten a couple months later.

So how do you talk about an issue nobody really wants to discuss?

Mazerolle's report puts the blame on the NWT Housing Corporation for a failure to address the needs of the homeless population.

The corporation's rules, he says, do not fit the Northwest Territories.

Need rent support? Fine, say the rules. Just apply to be on the public housing wait-list and you qualify for a subsidy to tide you over. Of course, those who owe money to public housing don't qualify for the list. Funny how people suffering from chronic ailments be they related to physical or mental health would be the most likely to fall behind on their rent, and therefore more likely to need a helping hand and yet less likely to receive the help they need.

Everyone deserves to have a roof over their head, whether they are in the grasp of an addiction or have simply fallen on hard times.

It is up to everyone who knows these people to turn up the pressure on the government.


Role on the team impacts later life
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, September 15, 2016

When I was young, gym class was an easy 'A,' a small hope for floor hockey and a brief respite from the stress of regular school.

As an adult, I see how much youth sports influenced my development and correlate to how I operate in the workplace.

Now I can't evangelize it enough, and I was glad to check in with East Three Secondary School's running club this week.

It could be my own bias, but I also see a correlation in my peers between dedication to youth sports and future professional success.

As a disclaimer, not everyone takes to sports naturally and many develop a similar foundation through other venues.

In school, I was good at grammar and struggled through everything else. I didn't want the teacher to ask me questions, put in just enough work to pass the class and let the dedicated students take the lead in group assignments.

In sports, I was the complete opposite: a leader, the one calling out the plays, extremely competitive and committed.

It was through sports that I learned how to operate in a team, follow a coach's command, run plays, guide teammates and set up each situation for success.

Sports taught me how to find and play my role in the workplace.

I grew up playing baseball and hockey, and in both I was defensively minded. I took care of my own end before going on offence.

In baseball, I was a lead-off batter with a high on-base percentage. I was not a big hitter.

For hockey, I was a defenceman entirely focused on getting the puck out of my end. I wasn't cherry-picking for breakaways.

And at work, these same instincts run true. I take a defensive, low-risk, high-percentage approach to get my job done, and I don't go swinging for the fences if it's going to leave me exposed.

I see in colleagues the big hitters, closing pitchers and other role players that all help make a good team.

In so many young people, I see a real passion during sports that might not always be on their face.

Far from an easy 'A' or simple extracurricular activity, sports are a key developmental experience for youth.

E-mailWe welcome your opinions. Click here to e-mail a letter to the editor.