August 6, 2004
Nunavut Tourism fires
web-logging staffer
Dismissal follows complaint
from anonymous local resident
Nunatsiaq News
A Nunavut Tourism marketing
officer was fired last month after a local resident complained about a web site
she ran in her spare time.
Penny Cholmondeley, known
on the Internet as "Polar Penny," was surprised to learn on July 18
that she was being fired because of the online journal, or web log, she had
kept since her arrival in Iqaluit in January.
The web log, or "blog,"
was easily found by typing the words "Polar Penny" into a search engine,
and often topped search engine lists generated by people looking up a local
business in Iqaluit, or for photos of Frobisher Bay.
During the six months she
lived in Iqaluit, Cholmondeley regularly updated the site with details about
life in the North, including photographs, anecdotes, and what she thought were
personal opinions, including food and restaurant reviews.
Cholmondeley was baffled
when executive director Maureen Bundgaard said that she had received an anonymous
complaint from someone in town, and that she had to let Cholmondeley go, just
before the end of her six month probation period.
Without warning, and with
no chance to amend or take down the site, Cholmondeley was fired from Nunavut
Tourism at the height of Nunavut's tourist season.
When contacted this week,
Bundgaard declined to comment on the dismissal.
Cholmondeley says she never
intended to associate Nunavut Tourism with a web site she perceived as strictly
personal. "I'm kind of stunned."
But the problem was that
the web site, all about Cholmondeley, clearly states the reason that Chomondeley
came to the North - to work for Nunavut Tourism.
Blogs Canada, a web site
that indexes web logs from around the country, described the site as "Musings
on life in Iqaluit, Nunavut and the oddities of daily existence in the Canadian
Arctic."
A typical entry covered
the Toonik Tyme igloo building contest, along with a description of how it's
done, and photos of Penny and her boyfriend inside the winning igloo.
Another feature describes
a walk that Cholmondeley and her boyfriend took around Iqaluit, and includes
photos of trash piled up around town.
Cholmondeley started the
web log years ago as a place where she could write about the events in her life.
In fact, she used her blog as an example of her writing when she applied for
the job with Nunavut Tourism, and had talked about the site at work.
The site was mainly intended
as a diary for her friends and family, and to document "what it's like
to move here from Edmonton or Vancouver," where she lived before coming
to Iqaluit.
"Ninety per cent of
the hits to my site are from my mom," she says.
But people who were looking
on the Web for information about Iqaluit were also using Cholmondeley's site.
In six months, she received
emails from three separate people who had come across her web site while looking
for information on visiting Nunavut. All three of them gave positive feedback
on the web site and on Nunavut.
"Iqaluit is different
and it is weird," Cholmondeley says, echoing the often sarcastic or wryly
amused tone of much of her site. "That doesn't mean I didn't have a good
time and enjoy the community."
Cholmondeley voluntarily
removed the site from the Internet at the request of her former employer, and
is treating the experience as a lesson learned. "I don't think people making
web logs realize that they can get fired."
On July 26, Cholmondeley
caught a flight to Nanaimo, B.C. where she plans to look for a new job. In a
few weeks, Polar Penny will become Pacific Penny.
Nunavut Tourism is now
advertising for a new marketing officer.
"Lucky for them, I'm
a pretty good filer," Cholmondeley says.
TOP
|