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Nunavut Briefs
January 17, 2003
Rangers to receive medals
Thirty-nine Canadian Rangers
who trekked to the Magnetic North Pole in April 2002 will receive the Queens
Golden Jubilee Medal from the Governor Generals personal allocation to
mark the achievement.
The Rangers came from
across the North to Resolute Bay and covered 1,700 km of sea ice and rough terrain
to reach the pole and mark 60 years of service to Canada.
The expedition was the
longest and largest sovereignty patrol in Canadian history.
The medals will be presented
over the next few months to members of the patrol by the commanding officer
and members of the headquarters staff of 1 Canadian Ranger Patrol Group.
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January 17, 2003
Heritage department launches
poster contest
Sheila Copps, the minister
of Canadian heritage, invites Nunavut students to participate in the 2003 Canada
Day Poster Challenge.
The theme of this years
contest is "Celebrating Canadas Natural Beauty." It is open
to anyone 18 years or younger.
Copps will invite the 13
provincial and territorial finalists to celebrate Canada Day in Ottawa on July
1, 2003, where they will join the Prime Minister, the Governor General and thousands
of other Canadians on Parliament Hill for Canadas 136th birthday party.
Contestants have until
Feb. 28, 2003, to submit their design to the Nunavut Celebrate Canada Committee.
For more information visit www.canadianheritage.gc.ca/affiche-poster.
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January 17, 2003
Small northern airlines
unsafe?
The Canadian Press reported
this week that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada is raising questions
about the safety of small northern air carriers.
The safety board has just
released a report containing the results of their investigation into a crash
at Fort Liard, NWT, on Oct. 16, 2001, involving a small plane carrying a pilot
and five passengers returning to the community from a pipeline-related signing
ceremony in Yellowknife.
After running into heavy
snow on his approach to Fort Liard, the pilot missed the landing area and flew
his aircraft into the ground instead.
Three passengers died,
while the pilot and two other passengers were hospitalized. The pilot still
suffers from amnesia.
The safety board report
says Transport Canadas safety standards for small northern airlines may
not be high enough, and that such planes should be outfitted with ground-sensing
equipment.
The report also said that
pilots with small northern airlines are often too inexperienced.
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