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Around Iqaluit

February 3, 2006

Iqaluit this week

Daycare rummage sale
Saturday, Feb. 4 from 10-2 p.m. Rummage and bake sale at Kids on the Beach Daycare. Clothing, toys, kitchen supplies, baked goods and more.

Military meet ‘n greet
Tuesday, Feb. 7 at 4:30 p.m. in the Cadet Hall. Come out and meet Canadian Forces troops in town for two weeks for sovereignty operation “Glacial Gunner.” A parade will be followed by a meet and greet and gift exchange.

Homeowners’ AGM
Thursday, Feb. 9 at 7 p.m., tentatively to be held in the offices of the Nunavut Employees Union building. The Namminiq Angirraliit Iqalunni Association meets for its annual general meeting. Discuss the city’s 2006 budget and learn how to apply for federal grants for home repairs. For more information, call Keith Irving at 979-5720 or Susan Gardener at 979-6211.

Latino dinner
Saturday, Feb. 11 at 6 p.m. at the Francophone association. Come and taste the food of Latin America. $30 for members; $40 for non-members. For information, call the AFN.

To have your event listed, free of charge, please call 979-5357, fax 979-4763, or send an email to johnt@nunatsiaq.com.


February 3, 2006

Man gets suspended sentence for armed standoff

Jerry Ell pleaded guilty to three counts of assault in the Nunavut Court of Justice on Wednesday last week.

The charges date back to an armed standoff with police in late October 2004, which caused the white rowhousing area of Iqaluit to be evacuated for six hours.

Ell’s lawyer struck a plea bargain with the Crown, where a sexual assault charge was lowered to simple assault. Ell pleaded guilty to that, and two other standing assault charges.

Charges of resisting arrest, disarming a peace officer and unsafe storage of a firearm were dropped.

He will serve a suspended sentence with one year of probation. Conditions include abstaining from alcohol or other intoxicating drugs. He isn’t allowed to keep firearms at home, but they can be stored outside his residence for hunting purposes. Ell currently lives in Rankin Inlet.

Ell held a series of high-profile jobs in the past, most recently as executive director of the Nunavut Economic Forum. He is also a past president of the Qikiqtaaluk Corp., and has tried unsuccessfully to get elected to the legislative assembly, Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., and the Baffin Regional Inuit Association.


February 3, 2006

City won’t mothball arena

Iqaluit councillors won’t mothball the Arctic Winter Games arena, or turn the sinking building into a heavy equipment parking lot and storage bin for the city’s old paperwork.

Those were all options on the table when councillors met during a meeting on Friday last week. However, they concluded that costs outweighed benefits in each case.

Closing the building would require the city to move the youth centre, located in the arena, into a new location, such as the curling rink, which would have to be closed and renovated.

Refitting the AWG arena as a parking lot and archive space would also cost the city money, and they’d still be locked into contracts for maintenance work done to keep the arena running.

Councillors first considered mothballing the arena in order to avoid increasing taxes this year. Although they agreed to do nothing, Coun. Glenn Williams said the meeting proved council had “done due diligence.”

The city has no plans to re-open the arena, which consultants estimate could cost $750,000 to permanently fix. That would involve building a new foundation supported by metal posts. The building rests on a soupy mess of mud and rock, which has caused it to sink unevenly for years.


January 27, 2006

Iqaluit this week

Family Literacy Day on Friday
Celebrate Family Literacy Day today from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at the Iqaluit Library, featuring the new NFB book and video “Let’s all read together.” Activities and prizes for kids. Contact the library at 979-5400 for more information.

Coffee house on Saturday
Saturday, Jan. 28, 7 :30 p.m., Inuksuk High School. The Iqaluit Music Society presents a coffee house. For info, call Jennifer Wakegijig at 979-8832 or email jenniferwalk@hotmail.com

Trash talk on Sunday
Groups and individuals concerned with waste issues in Iqaluit are invited to a weekend retreat, this Sunday, Jan. 29 from 2 to 5 p.m. at Aqsarniit Middle School. Discussions will focus on how to turn Iqaluit into an environmentally progressive city. For more information, contact Jim Little at 979-3261.

Ongoing: Circumpolar art display
The Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum continues to display “Encounter,” an exhibition by Norwegian artist Patrick Huse. The exhibition, which includes photographs from Iqaluit and Resolute Bay, runs through Feb. 12.

To have your event listed, free of charge, please call 979-5357,

 


January 27, 2006

No deal on Iqaluit pool

Iqaluit’s city council put off a decision to renew their lease on the community’s aging swimming pool, at a council meeting this past Tuesday.

That’s because they want to hear in person from the general manager of Nunastar, the owner of the building which houses the pool, about why their rent would rise by 8.8 per cent in each year of a proposed two-year deal. That means by 2008, the city would pay $213,540 to rent the space — more than $550 a day.

“There’s got to be some give and take here,” said Deputy Mayor Glenn Williams. “It’s very disappointing that it feels like they’re holding the city hostage.”

The city’s rented the pool since at least 1979. Their lease expires March 31, 2007.

“You’d think they’d at least come in. There would be a little mutual respect,” Williams said.

The city’s facilities manager, Simon Adams, said he is upset with negative media portrayals of the pool. “Let’s face it. It’s a hotel pool. It’s not at all designed for what we need in the community. We need a swimming pool,” he said.


January 27, 2006

City hikes commercial garbage fees

The City of Iqaluit decided to increase garbage collection fees for businesses and government by 50 per cent, at a meeting this past Tuesday.

The new rates will better reflect the cost of picking up garbage and maintaining the landfill, said Mark Hall, the city’s director of public works. The rates last increased in 1998. There are no plans to increase residential garbage rates.

The new rates are expected to boost revenues by $84,000, to help pay for waste management services, and draw in another $50,000, to be set aside as a reserve to purchase a new vehicle and equipment.


January 27, 2006

Shelter funds boosted

Iqaluit’s homeless shelter will receive a $60,000 boost in federal funding managed by the city, to help pay for repairs to its new location.

That brings the city’s total contribution to $315,000. The money actually comes from two different federal programs, and will help pay off work done to bring the building up to the fire code.

The Salvation Army has run the Oqota shelter since April 2005.

Men will move into the new location on Friday, Jan. 27. It’s a larger building that can hold 20 beds, up from 14. That means they’ll have to turn fewer people away during cold winter nights, said manager Garry Jones.

The old building will return to the Government of Nunavut and become low-income housing, Jones said.


January 27, 2006

Alcohol, cheating wives blamed for spousal abuse

Iqaluit city council’s meeting this past Tuesday evening dragged on for three hours and still ended with unfinished agenda, in part because of a prolonged debate over spousal violence and crime in the city.

Councilors heard that the number of prisoners held at RCMP detachment has risen steadily over the last few years, during Sgt. Dale Macleod’s monthly RCMP presentation. That number increased from 1,642 in 2001 to 2,339 in 2005.

Most arrests involve arguments between spouses, fuelled by drugs and alcohol.

Coun. Simanuk Kilabuk said men become upset after they catch their spouses cheating on them. That prompted a response from Macleod and the mayor.

“If a man’s jealous of his wife, it’s still no excuse to assault and hit her,” Macleod said.

Mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik agreed.

“Sorry Simanuk. Whether you’re caught with someone or not, that doesn’t give you the right to abuse anybody,” she said.

“I think we need to learn and teach it’s not acceptable. We have to remind people that physical abuse is wrong.”


January 27, 2006

BBS gets the boot

Baffin Building Systems is being given a big boot by the City of Iqaluit, and a hefty bill to pay for spilled oil.

Council passed a motion on Tuesday evening that orders BBS to close its asphalt plant and move it out of the North 40 by July 1, 2006.

The city plans to bill the company for the cost of managing, monitoring and cleaning up the mess. That will amount to at least $100,000, according to Geoff Baker, the city’s engineer.

That includes work done by Nunatta Environmental, which the city hired to place berms around the site and conduct water tests, as well as Trow, who the city hired to conduct further water tests.

Between 1,500 and 2,000 cubic metres of soil has been contaminated with petroleum around the immediate area, according to a motion passed earlier by council after an in-camera sitting on Nov. 22.

City staff consulted with their lawyer before council’s public works committee recommended a motion to council boot BBS out of the area

BBS built the asphalt plant several years ago after winning a contract to pave the city’s streets.


January 20, 2006

Iqaluit this week

Coffee house this weekend
Saturday, Jan. 28, 7 :30 p.m., Inuksuk High School. The Iqaluit Music Society presents a coffee house. For info, call Jennifer Wakegijig at 979-8832 or email jenniferwalk@hotmail.com

Family Literacy Day, next week
Celebrate Family Literacy Day on Friday, January 27 from 4:30-6 p.m. at the Iqaluit Library, featuring the new NFB book/video "Let's all read together." Activities and prizes for kids. Contact the library at 979-5400 for more information.

Ongoing: Circumpolar art display
The Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum continues to display "Encounter," an exhibition by Norwegian artist Patrick Huse. The exhibition, which includes photographs from Iqaluit and Resolute Bay, runs through Feb. 12.


January 20, 2006

GN isn't pulling weight: City

The Government of Nunavut isn't paying its fair share for search and rescue, building inspections and emergency dispatch services, according to City of Iqaluit councilors.

"All these services are outside, basically, our jurisdiction," said deputy mayor Glenn Williams, during budget discussions last week. "It's not our responsibility to pay for it, or fund it."

The city spent over $20,000 last year on search and rescue, which hasn't yet been reimbursed by the GN. The city plans to meet with government officials on Jan. 24 to discuss where responsibilities fall.

"No one seems to want to take responsibility for paying for it," said Ian Fremantle, the city's chief administrative officer.

Williams also questioned whether the city's emergency dispatch should be funded entirely by ratepayers, which hires six people at $90,000 a year. Williams suggested the service could be merged with the RCMP's dispatch office to save costs.

"We do have to take a good hard look at this. We have to think about where taxpayers' money is going."

Similar negotiations happened a year and a half ago, councilors heard, but without any progress. Still, other councilors agreed the idea should be revisited.

"This has never been a cost effective operation, and it's at the ratepayer's expense," said Coun. Nancy Gillis.

And while the city has a new building bylaw, they don't have an inspector to enforce it.

"There's no accountability on behalf of the developer, because there's no one to enforce it," Fremantle said.

The Government of Nunavut provides building inspections for the hamlets of Nunavut. Iqaluit councillors said they need similar assistance.


January 13, 2006

Iqaluit this week

Theatre: The Shape of a Girl

Saturday, Jan. 14, 8 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 15 at 2 p.m. and at 7 p.m., École des Trois Soleils.

The Part Time Players present “The Shape of a Girl,” a play based on the life of a 15-year-old girl struck by the news story of Reena Virk, the British Columbia girl who was swarmed, beaten and killed by a group of teenage girls in 1997. For info and tickets, $10, call Bella Lamb at 979-2674.


Coffee house next weekend

Saturday, Jan. 28, 7:30 p.m., Inuksuk High School. The Iqaluit Music Society presents a coffee house. For info, call Jennifer Wakegijig at 979-8832 or email jenniferwalk@hotmail.com

Ongoing: Circumpolar art display

The Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum continues to display “Encounter,” an exhibition by Norwegian artist Patrick Huse. The exhibition, which includes photographs from Iqaluit and Resolute Bay, runs through Feb. 12.

To have your event listed, free of charge, please call 979-5357, fax 979-4763, or send an email to saram@nunatsiaq.com.


January 13, 2006

GN drops Iqaluit Square

The city of Iqaluit won’t receive help from the Government of Nunavut to finish Iqaluit Square, a project intended to distinguish the territory’s capital.

The GN helped fund the first phase of work during 2005 on the project, which currently resembles a semicircle of boulders located in front of the Elder’s Centre. But the city has been left on the hook to pay $220,000 to continue work in 2006 by themselves.

“They said no, there’s no funding for the GN to continue the project,” said Ian Fremantle, the city’s chief administrative officer, during a special budget meeting on Tuesday.

The project has three stages. When finished, a stage will stand in the middle of a giant circle of stones, meant to resemble an oversized version of stones left from a tent.


January 13, 2006

Iqaluit offered extended pool lease

The city of Iqaluit has been offered a two-year extension on the lease for its badly-aging swimming pool.

The public pool’s lease expires March 2007, and there has been speculation about whether an extension would be offered by Nunastar, the company that owns the Astro Hill Complex where the popular pool is located.

The extended lease would continue from April 2007 to March 2009. Rent would increase by 8.5 per cent each year. The city currently pays about $180,000 annually in lease payments.

“They’re looking for a fixed, two-year deal,” said facilities manager Simon Adams during budget discussions this week.

With rising maintenance costs, deputy mayor Glenn Williams said the city needs to consider whether keeping the pool open is worthwhile.

“It’s going to be a tough sell in a couple of years,” he said, estimating the annual cost of running the pool could hit $750,000 in two years.

In December, the city heard plans from a consultant for building a new pool. But that would come with a hefty $10.4 million price tag, and it likely wouldn’t be finished until early 2010.

“There’s a good chance that in three years we aren’t going to have a pool,” said Adams.

The existing pool is in poor shape. Adams says this year they must replace the chlorine pump and sauna element and fix the decking on the floor. Equipment problems frequently cause the pool to close, or else the pool is filled to capacity and they turn residents away.

“I think we really need to lobby the government. We’re trying to attract people to Iqaluit, and taxpayers can’t pay for all of it.

“It’s important to teach kids how to swim, because people are boating and out on the land.”


January 13, 2006

Sinking arena may need to move

The only way to save Iqaluit’s sinking Arctic Winter Games arena may be to move it, according to the city’s chief administrative officer.

“It could actually come to moving the building,” Fremantle said during budget meetings this week.

Currently water sloshes beneath the ground under the arena, eroding the foundations of about one-third of the building, Fremantle said. Consultants suggest that part of the building could be supported by sinking posts into bedrock, but Fremantle said another solution could be to move the building, or build an extension at one end of it.

“Either way, it’s not going to come cheap.”


January 13, 2006

Fence to Nowhere delayed

Residents living on the Road to Nowhere still don’t have snow fencing to protect their homes from snowdrifts, because the wrong kind of orange plastic netting was shipped.

“We got stuff that looks like fishing net,” said Mark Hall, director of public works.

In late 2005, city council agreed to spend up to $300,000 on installing a snow fence around the snowbound neighbourhood, where residents fear being trapped in their homes by drifts. City staff planned to have the fence up by Christmas, but were delayed by the mix-up.

The fence should be installed by the end of this week, Hall said, or early next week at the latest. The more narrow netting accidentally shipped up will be used to fence off dig sites.


January 13, 2006

GN wants city to redraw fiscal calendar

The Government of Nunavut wants the City of Iqaluit to change the end of its fiscal year.

If done, this would change the time of year when Iqalummiut receive tax bills from the city. It would also likely cause a year of havoc as city accountants and administration staff sort out overlaps between the two systems in 2007, the year the plan would be adopted.

But councillors and city staff expressed skepticism about whether the shift would be worth the hassle, during a council meeting on Tuesday, Jan 10.

“They tend to dictate things to make things easier for them,” said Coun. Teresa Rodrigue. “They’re asking us to turn ourselves upside down.”

“I think we need to go through the process of justifying it, whether we do or not,” said deputy mayor Glenn Williams.

The change would shift the end of year from Dec. 31 to March 31, which is the end of the financial year for many organizations, including the hamlets of Nunavut, and the Government of Nunavut.

The proposed change would also mean new Iqaluit councilors elected in the fall 2006 would be more involved in the budget-making process. In the past, new councillors have had to adopt a budget process already partly underway.

The city plans to write a letter to the GN, asking what funding they would receive to help with the change-over.


January 13, 2006

City plans job vacancy ad blitz

After seeing nearly one-third of its employees leave over the last year, the city of Iqaluit plans to increase spending on advertising and recruitment.

“It was a year of transition. It was a year of change,” said finance director John Hussey, during budget discussions this week.

In 2005 the city saw a 30 per cent turnover in city staff. That’s 33 employees, including four department heads, who left in one year. The bylaw department, finance department and city’s translators are among those who took big hits.

“It was quite drastic,” said the city’s chief administrative officer, Ian Fremantle. “It was a bad year, turnover-wise... but we survived it.”

The draft budget includes $50,000 on advertising for the human resource department, to advertise city job vacancies across the country.

The human resources draft budget also includes $50,000 on recruitment, and $100,000 on removal and termination of employees.


January 6, 2006

Iqaluit this week

Budget meetings at City Hall

Monday, Jan. 9 and Tuesday, Jan. 10, in the City Hall council chambers.

City staff will present departmental budgets to council in two all-day sessions, both of which are open to the public from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Finance Director John Hussey will also make a public presentation of the 2006 budget next week, on Monday, Jan. 16, at 6 p.m.

Election candidates’ forum

Tuesday, Jan 10, 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., Parish Hall. Federal election candidates will discuss the issues.

The forum will be broadcast live on CBC Radio. The first hour and 15 minutes will be mainly in English, while the second hour and 15 minutes will be mainly in Inuktitut.

Translation will be available in both languages.

The incumbent Liberal candidate, Nancy Karetak-Lindell, Conservative candidate David Aglugark Sr., NDP candidate Bill Riddell, Green Party candidate Feliks Kappi and Marijuana Party candidate Ed deVries all plan to be present.

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