April 9, 2004
Snowbirds show crashes
and burns
Few events left to celebrate
Nunavut's 5th birthday
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
The City of Iqaluit has
grounded plans to bring the Canadian Air Force's Snowbirds spectacle to Iqaluit
to celebrate Nunavut's fifth anniversary.
Terry Ma, Iqaluit's economic
development officer, said the municipality lacks the money and the logistical
ability to host the internationally renowned team of jet fighters this summer.
Although the city's 2004
budget made room for $75,000 to accomodate around 25 Snowbirds personnel, Ma
said the money was supposed to come from the private sector, and has yet to
be raised from local businesses.
Ma said the municipality
turned down the Snowbirds because the air force didn't accept any of his proposed
dates. And the city rejected the military's proposed date of May 26, because
it would have been a stand-alone event, and risked being a promotional flop.
"You want to have
a good package to put together if you want to attract people," he said,
pointing to how festivals like Toonik Tyme near the end of April offer an array
of events, rather than one main attraction.
Ma said he wants to bring
the Snowbirds to Iqaluit in the future, adding that the city would be better
prepared for the show now that organizers were more familiar with the pilots'
logistical needs. He added that the delay will also give organizers time to
raise necessary funding.
"You've got to keep
positive," Ma said. "Things... just take a little while to get done
up here."
A spokeswoman for the Snowbirds
said they were "surprised" by the cancellation, since the Iqaluit
performance was part of a special tour of the North this summer.
The show would have been
Iqaluit's first time hosting the Snowbirds, a team of Canadian military pilots
who perform choreographed routines in jet fighters at trade shows and summer
festivals, largely to promote the armed forces and recruit new members.
The Snowbirds cancellation
knocks another event from the RCMP's ever-shortening lists of celebrations,
which included the RMCP Musical Ride, an elaborate show involving Mounties doing
precision drills on horseback. Const. Chris Coles said plans to host the Musical
Ride fell apart after police found they lacked the necessary $100,000 in funding.
However, Coles attributed
the Snowbirds' cancellation on miscommunication between city hall and the committee
coordinating Nunavut's anniversary events.
Although city hall cited
fundraising problems for cancelling the show, Coles said the RCMP was raising
the money needed to bring the Snowbirds.
"It is a disappointment,"
Coles said. "There appears to have been a disconnect [in communication
between RCMP and the City]."
Despite the Snowbirds cancellation,
RCMP are forging ahead with other anniversary celebrations. Local officers rode
dog teams to Kimmirut from Iqaluit on April 5 to commemorate how police used
to travel the former mail route before planes started flying regularly between
the two communities.
Coles said he also expects
the 34-piece Canadian Forces Central Band to perform on July 9 at the RCMP Regimental
Ball in the new arena, as part of the anniversary celebrations. Tickets go on
sale for $100.
RCMP will also visit a
defunct police station at Alexandria Fiord, north of Grise Fiord at the end
of June.
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