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Friday, December 1, 2017

Sheepway had ‘abnormal’ mindset during shooting, psychiatrist tells court

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arryl Sheepway was in an “abnormal” state of mind induced by significant cocaine use when he killed 25-year-old Christopher Brisson in 2015, a forensic psychiatrist testified at Sheepway’s first-degree murder trial. The defence’s key witness, Dr. Shabreham Lohrasbe told a Whitehorse court Nov. 29 about the “hyper-focused” mindset and “hyper-reactivity” Sheepway would have been experiencing when he fatally shot Brisson, his crack cocaine dealer, on a deserted Whitehorse road after luring him out under the pretense of buying more drugs. The trial hinges on not whether Sheepway killed Brisson — he’s already admitted to that — but Sheepway’s degree of culpability. The Crown has previously rejected his offer to plead guilty to a lesser charge of manslaughter. In both video statements played earlier in the trial and on the witness stand last both, Sheepway said he had only intended to rob Brisson following a month of almost-daily crack cocaine use. The day of Brisson’s killing, Sheepway’s then-wife had taken away his bank cards and cell phone, leaving him without a source of cash to buy more crack. In his testimony, Lohrasbe spoke about the effects of cocaine use and addition, telling the court that it creates a “paradoxical hyper-focus” on the drug and getting more of it while, at the same time, tuning everything

else out. Users are restless, hyper-reactive and respond very impulsively and quickly to unexpected situations, Lohrasbe testified, thanks both to the “jagged” ups and downs getting high and coming down produce. Prior to the trial, Lohrasbe also interviewed Sheepway and his ex-wife, and watched a “re-creation” Sheepway led the RCMP on. The psychiatrist, who’s served as an expert in hundreds of cases, said that Sheepway described the “hyper-focused cravings” for crack cocaine that he’s heard about “many times before.” In that kind of state, Lohrasbe said, caring about consequences and the realities of normal life tend to fall away — a mindset that could be described as “abnormal.” After years of hiding his marijuana use and later, his use of crack cocaine, Sheepway would have become “skilled at maintaining a façade of normality,” Lohrasbe continued, and would be able to complete seemingly mundane tasks — holding conversations or driving his truck for example — while still in an “abnormal mindset.” In recounting the time immediately leading up to the shooting, Lohrasbe said the narrative Sheepway had built up in his mind was to rob Brisson, use the crack and then build up the courage to kill himself. Lohrasbe noted later in his testimony that symptoms of a cocaine “crash” are essentially the opposite of a high, with users reporting feelings of despair, suicidal thoughts and being on-edge. The fact that Brisson fought back in grabbing

Ian Stewart/Yukon News file

Darryl Sheepway is on trial for first-degree murder in death of Christopher Brisson. the barrel of the shotgun was an important point, Lohrasbe said, because Sheepway never considered the possibility of something going wrong. That unexpected turn of events would have triggered Sheepway’s hyper-reactivity, Lohrasbe said, and in his mindset, Sheepway didn’t think about consequences — his thought process “seized” and he simply reacted, his actions driven by the cravings for more crack cocaine. “He shot without thinking of the consequences, he just wanted the drugs,” Lohrasbe said. Killing Brisson would then have had a “dramatic” and “drastic” impact on Sheepway’s mental state, Lohrasbe said, shifting him out of that hyper-focused and craving-driven mindset from before.

During cross-examination by the Crown, Lohrasbe confirmed that Sheepway did not appear to have experienced cocaine-related psychosis of any sort, nor did he claim amnesia for any part of the events. As well, he confirmed that his assessment was based on what Sheepway told him about his own drug use, and that no one could say, with certainty, how high Sheepway was at any point during the day of the killing. Lohrasbe also agreed with the Crown that Sheepway appeared to show logical, rational and goal-oriented thinking both leading up to and after killing Brisson, but also noted that “goal-oriented behaviour” can co-exist with a disordered mental state. The trial continues. Contact Jackie Hong at jackie.hong@yukon-news.com

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Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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Supreme Court rules Yukon government overstepped in Peel watershed case Jackie Hong News Reporter

Y

ukon First Nations and conservation groups declared victory Friday morning after the Supreme Court of Canada issued a landmark decision in the Peel watershed case, ruling that the Yukon did not have the authority to make the changes that it did to the Final Recommended Plan. The decision marks the ostensible end of a fiveyear-long legal battle over the future of the Peel, a 68,000-square-kilometre area of largely undisturbed wilderness in northern Yukon, and one that tested the territorial government’s commitment to modern treaties with Yukon First Nations. The dispute began shortly after the Peel Watershed Planning Commission finished a seven-year planning process in 2011, recommending that 80 per cent of the Peel be protected from development. The ruling Yukon Party released its own plan in 2012 that nearly inverted the amount of protected land. “In this case, the Yukon did not have the authority under (the Umbrella Final Agreement) to make the changes that it made to the Final Recommended Plan,” reads the unanimous judgment written by Justice Andromache Karakatsanis. “Yukon’s changes were neither partial nor minor…. (The changes) did not respect the land use planning process in the Final Agreements and its conduct was not becoming of the honour of the Crown.” “Yukon must bear the consequences of its failure to diligently advance its

interests and exercise its right to properly propose modifications related to access and development to the Recommended Plan.” The decision orders all parties to return to the stage in the planning process where the Yukon can approve, reject or modify the final plan after consultation. The current Yukon Liberal government had already promised as part of its election platform to implement the original Final Recommended Plan. The Supreme Court of Canada decision comes after — and overrides — earlier decisions from the Yukon Supreme Court and the Yukon Court of Appeal, both of which ruled that the Yukon Party government broke the rules by releasing its dramatically different plan. Both lower courts offered different remedies. In 2014, the Yukon Supreme Court, in response to a lawsuit brought against the territorial government by the First Nation of Nacho Nyak Dun, Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation, Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation, the Yukon Chapter-Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, and the Yukon Conservation Society ruled the government could not change the amount of protected land or allow new roads or other surface access. It ordered the second round of consultations to be done again. The Yukon government appealed that decision and, a year later, the court of appeal said the Yukon could make more significant changes as long as it properly consulted with everyone first, returning planning to the first stage of the process and essentially giving the territorial government a do-

over after it failed hold up its side of the agreement. The court of appeal had no right to return the parties to an earlier planning stage, Karakatsanis wrote, adding that it “improperly inserted itself into the heart of the ongoing treaty relationship between Yukon and the First Nations.” “In my view, the Court of Appeal’s approach is inconsistent with the appropriate role of courts in a judicial review involving a modern treaty dispute,” Karakatsanis wrote. “The court’s role is not to assess the adequacy of each party’s compliance at each stage of a modern treaty process…. Modern treaties are constitutional documents, and courts play a critical role in safeguarding the rights they enshire.” In a press release, Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation Chief Roberta Joseph said she was “extremely pleased to be finally arriving on a path of certainty.” “This is the outcome we were hoping for. This is a victory for our modern-day treaties and the collaborative planning processes promised for Land Use Planning,” Joseph said. “We look forward to working with the present government on the next steps outlined by the court.” Chief Simon Mervyn of the First Nation of Na Cho Nyäk Dun and Chief Bruce Charlie of the Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation echoed Joseph’s sentiments. “I want to thank Yukoners and Canadians for all the support in protecting the integrity of our final agreements. The agreements were designed for us to protect the environment, and now we will work in unity, for the animals, the land and the people,” Mervyn

Ian Stewart/Yukon News file

Protect the Peel supporters gather outside the Yukon legislature in 2012. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Dec. 1 that the Yukon government did not have the authority to make the changes that it did to the Final Recommended Plan. said. “As we move forward, we hope that Canadians and Yukoners will plan for the betterment of humanity. I’m looking forwards to coming home to celebrate.” “We have always been responsible stewards of our traditional territory even in the face of adversity and uncertainty,” Charlie said. “We are pleased that the Court agrees that the path towards reconciliation requires honourable implementation of the spirit and intent of our final agreements.” Jeff Langlois, counsel for the Gwich’in Tribal Council, who served as interverners on the case, said in a phone interview he considered the decision a victory.

“At the outset of this case, this result was far from certain and my clients, they’re really ecstatic,” Langlois said, describing the case as “foundational” for future land use planning done under the Umbrella Final Agreement. Although the Gwich’in Tribal Council is not a signatory to the UFA, Langlois said it wanted to get involved because it recognized the case would have an impact on all future collaborative processes between First Nations and governments. “These modern treaties set out a lot of processes by which the government, as a result of claims for titles for

Aboriginal rights, have said, ‘OK, reconciliation is going to mean we’re going to share some of the decision-making power the Crown says we have,’” Langlois said. “Gwich’in Tribal Council’s point was, if that’s going to have any meaning, and you’re going to do that through this collaborative decision-making process … every party going forward for the other planning regions will have to pay attention to this, and really, what I think it’s going to mean is, it’s going to tell First Nations and the Crown, ‘You need to be participating in details and saying your piece when you’re supposed to.’” Yukon NDP MLA Kate White said the decision was “fantastic” and spoke to the perseverance and resilience of Yukon First Nations as well as all Yukoners. “It’s hugely valuable, and not just for Yukon… This sets out the expectations for other governments in Canada and First Nation communities and First Nation governments,” she said in a phone interview. “I’m super excited… Facebook showed me a picture from five years ago on Monday, and it was us, a huge group, hundreds of people at the Gold Rush Inn talking about protecting the Peel and how we wouldn’t accept the government’s desire to re-write it. It’s awesome.” Not everyone was pleased with the decision. In a news release, the Yukon Chamber of Mines said it was concerned with the amount of land that has been put off limits to development. With files from Ashley Joannou Contact Jackie Hong at jackie.hong@yukon-news.com

Appeal court hears case of Old Crow woman who says sentence unfairly factored in marijuana use Jackie Hong News Reporter

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he Yukon Court of Appeal heard the case of an Old Crow woman Nov. 30 who’s contesting her sentence for an assault charge on the grounds that the sentencing judge focused on her marijuana use — despite it having nothing to do with her offence. Fifty-six-year-old Lena Josie, of Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation, pleaded guilty to common assault in February after punching

another woman in the face at an Old Crow grocery store in December 2016. However, although sentencing judge Michael Cozens found Josie was unlikely to reoffend and would otherwise be granted a conditional discharge, he wrote in his sentencing decision that Josie “admitted to smoking marijuana on a daily basis” and because of that, found a discharge wasn’t in the public interest. Josie instead received a sixmonth probation order. In court, Josie’s lawyer Vincent Larochelle argued

to Yukon Supreme Court Justice Ron Veale that modern Canadian society has moved towards the legalization of marijuana and a greater acceptance of its consumption, to the point where smoking marijuana is largely no longer seen as a major issue. Larochelle also took issue with Cozens linking marijuana consumption to supporting drug trafficking and crime. “It doesn’t make sense,” Larochelle said, and offered up a theoretical scenario to Veale — if he were to show

up in court for an assault charge wearing a cotton shirt made in a sweatshop in Bangladesh, does that mean he shouldn’t get a conditional discharge because he, by Cozens’ logic, is funding slavery? Larochelle argued, in closing, that allowing Josie’s sentence to stand would set a dangerous precedent, setting up a future where lawyers will tell their clients not to disclose drug use in order to obtain conditional discharges. Crown attorney Amy Porteous, in her submissions,

said that Josie’s sentence was fit. The whole point of a conditional discharge is that the person to whom it’s granted to will follow the law and keep the peace, she said, and possessing marijuana is a violation of the Controlled Substances Act. Porteous argued that Larochelle was asking the court to overlook that fact and assume that Josie wouldn’t be caught, even though she said she intends to continue smoking marijuana. Porteous said if the situation were the other way around — if Josie had been

charged with possession and told the court she intends to keep punching people in the face — the court would have no issue with not granting her a conditional discharge. Porteous also noted that, even though it wasn’t a key factor in Cozens’ sentencing, Veale should consider the issue of what she said was Josie’s lack of genuine remorse and how that would impact a sentence. Veale is reserving his judgement. Contact Jackie Hong at jackie.hong@yukon-news.com


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he Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre and Les EssentiElles are calling on women to sign a letter that asks the City of Whitehorse to look into the number of sexual assaults taking place in taxis. “We are calling on the mayor and council to address taxi safety in Whitehorse in light of the recent case where a taxi driver (allegedly) assaulted two women,” the letter reads. “Taxi cab drivers sexually assaulting women in taxis is not a new issue in our community.” The incident the letter refers to occurred in early October of this year, when 25-year-old Whitehorse taxi driver Jaspal Singh Tamber allegedly sexually assaulted two women on the evening of Sept. 29. That case is still before the courts. The letter makes 10 recommendations, including changing the bylaw so that all video recorded in cabs is sent to the city following the end of each driver’s shift and ensuring that the cameras cannot be shut off or disabled. The letter also recommends each cab contain an information sheet, including the cab driver’s name and the company they drive for, and that the Fri, Dec 1 thru Thurs, Dec 7 Whitehorse Yukon Cinema 304 Wood Street Ph: 668-6644

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Elaine Michaud, executive director of Les EssentiElles, from left, Sarah Murphy, program coordinator at Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre, and Collyn Lovelace, Yukon Women’s Coalition coordinator, hold up the letter they plan to present to city council full of women’s signatures on Dec. 4. city create a training and accreditation program that cab drivers must pass before being licensed. Mayor Dan Curtis said he felt the issue of safety for women in taxi cabs was “of grave concern” and that the record of assaults was “unacceptable.” Curtis said he isn’t sure why taxis are so unsafe for women. “It makes me really sad that we are even having this conversation,” he said. “In recent memory, people have fallen victim to drivers who have preyed on the most vulnerable…. It’s appalling.” Curtis said the city is “doing what it can” to “weed the bad apples out.” The mayor said he also recognized that there were

“constraints” within the city’s public transit system, which does not run on Sundays or after 10:30 p.m. Concerns around sexual violence and taxi services have existed in the city for more than a decade. In 2006, a cab driver told a News reporter that he would tell “young girls never to get into a cab at night,” following reports of sexual misconduct by drivers against intoxicated female passengers, including exchanging sex for rides with teenage passengers. Similar concerns were raised the following year, when one man — himself a retired cab driver — said he witnessed a taxi driver solicit oral sex from a woman instead of money for a ride. In June 2009, cab driver Mohamed Abdullahi was charged with sexually assaulting a female passenger. He was released on bail and was permitted to continue opporating his taxi service provided he “did not pick up unaccompanied female passengers” by late July of the same year. Cab companies are privately owned, but all cab drivers are require a license by the city.

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Up until 2010, the city did not require taxi drivers to have background checks. In 2015, the city made further changes to its taxi bylaws, including mandating the installation of high resolution cameras which record for up to 72 hours. Cab companies were given two years to comply, and the bylaw became enforceable in May 2017. Ken Giam, owner of Premier Cabs, told the News at the time the bylaw went into effect that he felt it unfairly “punished” cab companies, even as he alleged there were criminal elements within the industry. Sarah Murphy, program co-ordinator for the Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre, said she felt the 72-hour cap time on recordings was not long enough. Copies of the letter can be found at endviolenceyukon.com. Completed letters can be sent sent to vfwc@ northwestel.net or elles@ lesessentielles.ca, or printed off and delivered in-person to 503 Hanson Street. The letter-signing campaign is part of the 16 Days to End Gender-Based Violence campaign which runs Nov. 25 to Dec.10. The letters will be presented to council at the Dec. 4 standing committee meeting. Contact Lori Fox at lori.fox@yukon-news.com

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Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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Council of Yukon First Nations hosts training for Gladue report writing Jackie Hong News Reporter

O

rganizers of a workshop in Whitehorse that trained participants on writing Gladue reports, which help shape sentencing decisions for Indigenous offenders, are hoping it’s the first step in building a much-needed reserve of Gladue writers in the Yukon. Facilitated by the Council of Yukon First Nations (CYFN) and funded by the justice department, the three-day session, held at a Whitehorse hotel starting Nov. 28, saw approximately a dozen participants learning how to write Gladue reports as well as the history, law and responsibility surrounding them. Gladue reports are named after a 1999 Supreme Court of Canada decision brought on by a Cree woman, Jamie Tanis Gladue, who had pleaded guilty to manslaughter and appealed her sentence. Her appeal forced the court to clarify a section of the Criminal Code that states court must consider all alternatives to jail when sentencing an offender, with “particular attention to the circumstances of Aboriginal offenders.” “Really, what the court said was, ‘There are too many Aboriginal people in jail,’” said workshop instructor Jonathan Rudin, the program director at Aboriginal Legal Services in Toronto. “They talked about the over-representation of Aboriginal people in Canada and called it a crisis in the Canadian criminal justice

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Shadelle Chambers, CYFN executive director, bottom row second from left, sits for a photo with participants being trained to write Gladue reports on Nov. 30. system and they said, ‘Judges need information about the Aboriginal person that they’re sentencing.’” Gladue reports take into account an Indigenous offender’s personal history as well as historical and systemic issues — the impact of residential schools, for example — and suggest how those factors should be taken into account when it comes to sentencing. The reports may also suggest alternatives to incarceration and instead focus on themes like restorative justice. “The courts are working in vacuums, and when the court works in a vacuum, Indigenous people who

don’t present well generally to the court … because they have prior criminal records, they often don’t have jobs, they don’t look like the people who we should give breaks to and we don’t know anything about their lives, it’s easy to resort to jail for people in those circumstances,” Rudin explained. “The idea of a Gladue report is that it stops that process and it makes that person a person. A Gladue report lets you hear from the individual. They’re quoted directly. You hear from people who know them. You get to see the person as not just someone who’s before the courts but is a full per-

son,their strengths and their weaknesses. And that’s something you don’t get too much in court.” However, even though more than 70 per cent of inmates at the Whitehorse Correctional Centre are Indigenous, the Yukon does not have any dedicated Gladue writers. There are currently three people in the territory who do it on a volunteer basis and “write these reports sort of off the side of their desks while they were doing other things,” Rudin said. Ontario, by contrast, has about 30 full-time, paid Gladue writers. CYFN executive director Shadelle Chambers said there’s been a need

for a Gladue program in the Yukon for years, but, until recently, there hasn’t been political support in place for establishing any sort of framework. “Obviously, previous government had different views around justice and crime … so I think it’s important to realize that there are restorative justice principles in place here in the Yukon, and throughout the Criminal Code as well, that perhaps have not always been accessed,” said Chambers, who also participated in the workshop. “But with the willingness of dedicated political leadership, both on First Nations’ sides and territorial and

even the federal (side).… We are seeing some movement towards this.” The goal now, Chambers said, is to continue to hold training sessions and build up a “large, healthy roster” of Gladue writers in the Yukon to work for various First Nations governments and organizations. Tracey White was among the participants of the Nov. 28 training session. An Anishinaabe woman originally from Northern Ontario and an intergenerational survivor of residential schools, White has lived in the Yukon for 14 years now and is the women’s legal advocate for the territory. She said she decided to do the training because, through her work, she’s seen the important impact Gladue reports can have. “My interest was purely because (Gladue reports) need to be written and they’re not,” she told the News following the final day of training. “There’s not enough people available and I want to make myself available and help our people. Trauma is trauma across the country and we just need to step up as a people and make sure that the judges are using this.” She added that she thought it was important for First Nations people to be Gladue writers. “I think it’s important to be First Nations because you have a greater understanding of the impact of trauma and colonization,” White said. “You have to be empathetic — not sympathetic, but empathetic.” Contact Jackie Hong at jackie.hong@yukon-news.com

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Friday, December 1, 2017

Quote of the Day “He shot without thinking of the consequences, he just wanted the drugs.” Psychologist Shabreham Lohrasbe testifying at the murder trial of Darryl Sheepway. Page 2.

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EDITORIAL

Imagine that: Yukon’s cannabis debate has been reasonable

CANADIAN COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER AWARD 2017

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A

s Canada hurtles towards the legalization of marijuana next year, the provinces and territories have begun outlining their regulations for the drug. So far, the regimes we know about have been a decidedly mixed bag. Ontario and Quebec have gone full narc. Quebec is flat-out banning home-grown plants — even though federal rules allow for four per person. Ontario is planning absurdly harsh punishments for any lingering grey-market dispensaries that might compete with its government retail monopoly, which will only see 40 stores to start. New Brunswick, meanwhile, is enacting what might be the dumbest individual rule so far: It will require pot stashes to be kept under lock-and-key, like guns, ostensibly to protect children. According to Global News, Denis Landry, the province’s public safety minister, explicitly likened cannabis to guns. “For people here in New Brunswick who have guns in their houses, it’s locked. It’s their responsibility. This will be the same thing,” he said. This is just another example in a long line of politicians saying dumb things about pot. Peter Kent, a Conservative MP and former journalist who should know how to, you know, research things, told the House of Commons that legalizing weed is “virtually the same as putting fentanyl on a shelf within reach of kids.” This is a very stupid thing to say, because a speck of fentanyl can kill you. Marijuana is not harmless, particularly for the developing brains of children, but a 2014 study found that it’s almost phsyically impossible to consume a fatal dose of the stuff. Meanwhile, in Quebec, public health minister Lucie Charlebois wrongly believes black market weed is laced with fentanyl and that homegrown plants must be banned because kids will eat them. Not to be outdone, an Alberta MLA suggested this week that legal pot may cause a communist revolution. Even in the Yukon, officialdom is not immune to reefer madness. Consider the case of Lena Josie of Old Crow. Josie was denied a conditional discharge on an assault charge, despite pleading guilty, apologizing and having no prior criminal record. The reason, according to sentencing judge Michael Cozens, is because Josie admitted to smoking two joints a day. Cozens believes Josie is supporting drug trafficking, which is technically true, though it exhibits a lack of understanding by Cozens about how Canada’s grey market pot industry currently works. Furthermore, Cozens’ decision contains no evidence about where Josie’s weed comes from. He argues that it is not in the public interest to give Josie a discharge, even though marijuana has absolutely nothing to do with the assault. Josie is, understandably, appealing. The Crown, shamefully, agrees with Cozens. It’s perhaps too much to expect judges and politicians to be experts on every subject they encounter as lawmakers, but it is reasonable to demand that they base their views and policies on something resembling reality.

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Ashley Joannou ashleyj@yukon-news.com

Lori Fox lori.fox@yukon-news.com

Jackie Hong Fortunately, at the level of territorial politics at least, common sense and reasoned debate are breaking out all over the place. No, seriously. The government’s pointwoman on pot, Justice Minister Tracy-Anne McPhee, has treated this file matter-of-factly, acknowledging the fact that the government has a tight timeline to put together a Cannabis Act, more or less from scratch. Remember, because of the Yukon’s fixed legislative sitting dates, the government has to get this bill passed by March, even though federal legalization doesn’t kick in until July 1. “This is the beginning. We’re under a tight timeline, everybody in Canada is, so we’re doing this in stages,” McPhee told reporters Nov. 22. While there won’t be private retail right away, the government has promised there will be and has also signalled interest in encouraging the creation of a local “craft” growing industry. For the time being, customers will have to make do with a store in Whitehorse and online sales for the rest of the territory. This is not perfect, and the businesspeople who have expressed interest in opening will have to wait. But there are criticisms from the opposition parties that are also fair. The Yukon Party’s Brad Cathers has said the government’s published five-page framework is too vague and he’s right. Cathers is also concerned about the tax on cannabis. Ottawa has mused about charging a 10 per cent excise tax. It’s not clear how the feds will split that money or how much tax the territory will add on its own. Cathers argues the tax needs to be low enough to freeze out the black market, and again, he has a point here. Certainly the government isn’t finished

crafting its Cannabis Act, but it could certainly release more details. And NDP Leader Liz Hanson has a point with her criticism of the too-simplistic rules regarding where it will be legal to consume pot. Too start, it will only be allowed on private property or with a landlord’s permission. There are a couple of problems with this. One, as Hanson points out, is that people with prescriptions for medical cannabis could be prohibited from smoking in their homes. Two, it’s unfair to renters, who will have to rely on the goodwill of their landlords to consume — even outside on their back deck — a product that it’s otherwise legal to buy. The third thing is that there is so far no differentiation between smoking, vaping and the consumption of edibles (which won’t be legal until 2019). The government is leaving open the possibility of allowing, say, vaping lounges in the future, but these are loopholes it should sort out sooner rather than later. Still, what’s refreshing here is that both the government and the opposition parties are treating this as a serious public policy issue. The government is aiming for balance and appears not to have included any supremely boneheaded rules like, say, New Brunswick. The opposition is making substantive criticisms based on fair reading of the government’s plans. Best of all, neither the government nor opposition politicians have said anything blatantly insane, uninformed or stupid. That in itself is a win. Contact Chris Windeyer at editor@yukon-news.com

Letters to the editor The Yukon News welcomes letters from its readers. Letters should be no longer than 500 words and must be signed with your full name and place of residence. A daytime phone number is also required for verification purposes only. We reserve the right to edit letters for clarity, length, accuracy and legality. You can send submissions to editor@yukon-news.com. They can be faxed to 867-668-3755 or mailed to 211 Wood St., Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 2E4.

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YUKON NEWS

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7

The very long term view on commodity prices

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f you are looking for Christmas gift ideas for that special policy analyst in your life, I highly recommend A Long-Run Version of the Bank of Canada Commodity Price Index (1870 to 2015). In the age of Twitter, when even the 30-minute cable news cycle is too much for many, it’s good to take a step back and take the 100-year view. And to allow us to do that about commodity prices, boffins at Statistics Canada have been beavering away to link dozens of dusty old data sets on historic commodity prices. This is a family newspaper, so I won’t get into the details of their Fisher chain index methodology. But the insights that come out the other end shed a unique light on the Yukon’s favourite commodities, as well

as the jobs and business opportunities they create. The report includes dozens of commodities: nine metals, three energy sources, lumber, pulp, newsprint, six agricultural commodities, plus fish. The first insight is how Canada’s commodity production has changed over the years. Back in 1870, when Canada acquired what is now the Yukon, 88 per cent of the young nation’s commodity output was agriculture. That has declined steadily to just 12 percent in 2014. In 1870, forestry was 11 per cent. It peaked in 1947 at 36 per cent but in 2014 was just eight per cent. Energy was one per cent in 1870 and has surged in recent decades to 63 per cent in 2014. Canada is indeed a petro-commodity player. As for mining, it peaked at 31 per cent of our output during the Second World War and has been declining through some booms and busts to 15 per cent today. If you look at mining as share of the total economy and not just commodities, so far in 2017 the industry represents 1.2 per cent of

Canada’s total output. That is just “metal ore mining,” and excludes coal, quarries and support activities for the mines. While mining is critical to Yukoners, you can see why people in, say, Toronto think of it as a small and declining part of Canada’s economic story. The next insight is from the mix of Canada’s mining output and the different fates faced by the Yukon’s most common commodities. Gold was a huge part of Canada’s output until World War 2. You won’t be surprised to hear that there is a huge spike between 1898 and 1900, when Klondike gold pushed the metal to over 3/4 of Canada’s total mineral output. Today it is around 1/3. Copper and nickel were each around 20 per cent of Canada’s output for decades after the Second World War, but have slipped to about 10 per cent each today. Silver, lead and zinc now represent less than four per cent of mineral output combined. The Faro mine may have contributed to a surge in zinc that can be seen on the chart from the

1970s to the late 1990s, but the line trends down after that. So much for production. What about prices? For commodities overall, the long-term price trend has been negative. The index was 155 in 1870 and was 79 in 2015. This data is interesting because of the long-standing debate about population growth, resource scarcity and technological change. Some people thought that rising populations and fixed amounts of farmland and non-renewable resources would lead to shortages and price spikes. Others argued that technological advances and improved business techniques would allow more output to be generated at ever lower costs. The long-term price data in the report suggest the latter argument has prevailed (although we can’t say for certain whether this will be the case in the future). Take agriculture commodities as an example. The U.S. Department of Agriculture puts out inflation-adjusted data on prices for corn, wheat and soybeans. All three are

only half or even one-third as expensive as they were in the 1950s. The report also contains interesting hints about the “supercycle,” that semi-mythical beast that often inspires the most optimistic mineral exploration plans. The supercycle idea is that powerful, but sometimes deeply hidden, factors drive the commodity industry in multi-decade cycles of boom and bust. Indeed, the report’s authors include a chart showing their index from 1870 today. Over and above the daily ups and downs of the commodity markets, it clearly shows some big cycles every 30 years or so. There are big surges during both world wars, which is to be expected given the massive war efforts. There is another after the world changed monetary systems in the 1970s after the demise of the Bretton Woods system, and another in the first part of this century, possibly caused by the massive growth in China and India. Falling oil prices since 2014 have hit the index hard given how big a part of Canada’s output comes

from this sector. The index today is below the line. Does this portend another slump for a decade or two until another supercycle upturn in the 2040s? Whoever manages to answer that question correctly may make big bucks in mining and commodity investing. So what does all this mean for the Yukon? One observation is that, even at the nadir of the cycle over the last 100 years, mining never went to zero. If a property has good grades, good economics and a strong management team, it can survive even the worst cycle. On the other hand, the long term production and pricing trends may not be our friends. We can improve the chances of Yukon mines if we keep working to keep energy costs and taxes low, as well as regulatory processes predictable and not too onerous. Keith Halliday is a Yukon economist and author of the MacBride Museum’s Aurore of the Yukon series of historical children’s adventure novels. He is a Ma Murray award-winner for best columnist.

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

The Dakhká Khwáan Dancers and DJ Dash launched their debut collaborated album with a show performed to a packed house at the Yukon Arts Centre on Nov. 24.


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YUKON NEWS

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Tories call for Morneau to resign, but Trudeau defends his ďŹ nance minister Andy Blatchford Canadian Press

OTTAWA onservative Leader Andrew Scheer demanded Bill Morneau hand in his resignation Wednesday as political rivals intensified their attacks on a finance minister mired in controversy for weeks. But Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched a spirited defence of Morneau, accusing the Tories of engaging in baseless personal attacks that they won’t repeat outside the House of Commons for fear of being sued. “After careful consideration, in my capacity of leader of the Opposition, I am officially calling on Bill Morneau to resign as finance minister,� Scheer said shortly before question period, where the issue dominated debate. He advised Trudeau to fire Morneau if he refused to step aside on his own. But the prime minister said he still has full confidence in Morneau and then went on the offense against

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the Opposition. “The fabrications and the personal attacks, the slinging of mud in this place, and hiding behind parliamentary privilege, is not what Canadians expect from this place,� Trudeau said. The push for Morneau’s departure is yet another challenge to a finance minister who’s been forced to navigate several ethics-related controversies since the summer. In July, he proposed tax-system changes that enraged small-business owners to the point he eventually had to back off elements of his plan. Morneau has also faced intense political pressure over how he handled his personal financial arrangements after coming to office. The questions focused on his shares in the human resources firm Morneau Shepell, which was built by his family and for which he was executive chairman until his 2015 election win. After the controversy erupted, he sold off the remainder of his holdings in the company — worth about

$21 million — and vowed to place his other substantial assets in a blind trust. Morneau donated to charity the difference between what the shares were worth at the time of the sale and their value in 2015 when he was first elected — an amount estimated at about $5 million. The federal ethics commissioner also fined Morneau $200 for failing to disclose a private corporation, in which he is a director, that owns a villa in France. Morneau had disclosed ownership of the villa to Mary Dawson but, due to what his office called an administrative oversight, failed to disclose that ownership was through a corporation. Then came conflict-of-interest allegations over proposed pension reform, spearheaded by Morneau, that opponents have alleged would bring him personal financial benefit. The federal ethics commissioner has launched a formal examination into the matter. This week, the Tories and the New Democrats have been grilling the Liberals

about his earlier, late-2015 sale of shares in Morneau Shepell — a transaction that took place ahead of a tax change announcement. During Monday’s question period, Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre claimed Morneau’s December 2015 announcement, which unveiled the government’s plan raise income taxes on the highest earners, caused the entire stock market to drop — including the value of Morneau Shepell shares. Poilievre said 680,000 shares in the company were sold off roughly a week earlier in a move that saved the owner half a million dollars. On Dec. 7, 2015, the day of Morneau’s tax-change announcement, the Toronto stock index fell 2.4 per cent for its single weakest day of the quarter. Oil prices fell by about five per cent, which one bank economist said may have been responsible for much of the weakness in the market. Nevertheless, the Conservatives have been repeatedly asking Morneau all week if he was the person who sold those Morneau Shepell

shares. Morneau initially sidestepped those questions, but on Wednesday he acknowledged he did sell off some shares shortly after coming into office in the fall of 2015. He did not provide specifics on the timing of the sale nor how many shares were involved. On Monday, Poilievre went so far as to suggest that Morneau used his inside knowledge as a minister to benefit himself financially, telling the Commons that “it is actually the responsibility of government to ensure that no minister ever uses inside knowledge to benefit from transactions on the stock market.� Morneau called that insinuation “absurd� and threatened Tuesday to sue the Conservatives. He dared the Tories to repeat their suggestion outside the House and away from the shield of parliamentary privilege, which gives MPs legal protection from libel and defamation laws. And again on Wednesday, Morneau and Trudeau took turns challenging the Tories

to utter the insinuation outside the House. “If the member opposite has an allegation, if he wants to say something, he should say what he means,� Morneau said in a response to a question from Scheer. “He should say it here, he should say it now, he should stand up and say it — and then he should go out into the foyer and say it again.� The Conservatives, meanwhile, added a new argument to their charge that Morneau personally benefited from the tax announcement, pointing out that it prompted some market analysts to encourage wealthier shareholders to sell off some their stock before the changes came into effect on Jan. 1, 2016. “The members of the opposition cannot even keep their story straight in their attacks,� scoffed Trudeau. “For weeks they demanded that the finance minister sell his shares. Now, they are saying that he should not have sold his shares. They are all over the place in their attacks, because that is just what they do.�

U.S. governors to Canada: Use NAFTA to relax duties on online purchases Alexander Panetta Canadian Press

WASHINGTON anada is being pressed for freer trade in online goods by a number of American states, with eight state governors writing a letter seeking an expansion of Canada’s low limits for online duty-free purchases. Their letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer says the NAFTA talks are an opportunity to review the $20 limit for what Canadians can buy online without paying duties on foreign goods. Canada has one of the strictest duty-free limits in the world for online goods — a mere fraction of the $800 Americans can spend on sites like Amazon and eBay without paying an import fee. “Canada’s ‌ threshold remains among the lowest in the industrialized world,â€? says the Nov. 21 letter, signed by the governors of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, Montana, Oregon, Utah and Virginia. “Canada’s low threshold for the collection of duty and tax creates unnecessary price increases for Canadian consumers and hinders North American manufacturers’ supply chains on both sides of our shared border‌ “A modernization of the

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Canadian de minimis level would be beneficial to both countries.� Changing Canada’s limit is a high priority for the U.S. side in NAFTA talks. An American source familiar with the talks tells The Canadian Press that’s one reason the U.S. mentions the issue and sets a specific $800 target in its published list of negotiating objectives. The source says that while other U.S. demands are vaguely worded and devoid of hard numbers to leave negotiating room, the demand to change the limit — known as “de minimis� —

is firm and unequivocal. In Canada, the debate pits importers versus bricksand-mortar shops. Traditional retailers warn that domestic stores would be hit hard by a change in policy, as Canadian purchases would flow to retailers based outside the country. The Retail Council of Canada says it’s unfair to compare the duty-free levels between the countries, since the domestic tax burden is different on U.S. retailers. “There is no comparison between Canada and the U.S.,� the council says on its website.

“First, the United States does not have a federal sales tax, so there is no tax advantage created for inbound shipments. The U.S. also does not collect state and local sales taxes at the border

or for interstate shipments.� The U.S. also dominates the online retail space, the council notes: only 22 per cent of U.S. customers report having made a purchase from a foreign seller,

compared with 67 per cent of Canadians. The U.S. push for changes is not new — raising Canada’s de minimis level was also a priority of the Obama administration.

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YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

WHITEHORSE WEATHER 5-DAY FORECAST

Protecting the environmental and social integrity of Yukon, while fostering responsible development that reflects the values of Yukoners and respects the contributions of First Nations.

TODAY’S NORMALS

TONIGHT

-11

°C MONDAY

SATURDAY high low

°C -10°C -12

-11 °C Low: -16

High:

high

-4°C

-7

low

09:40 Sunset: 15:57

Sunrise:

°C

TUESDAY

SUNDAY

-9°C low -10°C high

15:32 Moonset: 04:40

-6 low -6°C high

°C

Moonrise:

°C

352-(&76 23(1 )25 38%/,& &200(17 PROJECTS OPEN FOR PUBLIC COMMENT PROJECT TITLE

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Dawson (Dawson)

Mining – Other (Coal, Aggregate, etc.)

2017-0148

EXTENSION December 6, 2017

Fuel Tank Storage Callison Industrial Subdivision Lot 19

Dawson (Dawson)

Other Industrial Activities

2017-0170

December 7, 2017

Placer Mine – UNLLT of Clear Creek

Dawson (Dawson)

Mining - Placer

2017-0163

December 7, 2017

Alsek River Trips Kluane National Park Preserve

Haines Junction (Haines Junction)

Recreation and Tourism

2017-0178

December 5, 2017

Aggregate Recovery from Mine Tailings for Road Maintenance

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Canada’s top court to hear Vice Media fight RCMP demand for reporter materials Colin Perkel Canadian Press

TORONTO anada’s top court agreed on Thursday to weigh in on a case in which the ability of journalists to do their work conflicts with the ability of police and prosecutors to do theirs. The Supreme Court of Canada decision to grant Vice Media leave to appeal follows a ruling by Ontario’s highest court that reporter Ben Makuch turn over background materials to the RCMP related to interviews he did with a suspected terrorist. “Oh, man, very relieved,” Makuch said moments after learning of the leave decision. “This is an extremely important matter that our country’s highest court needs to hear.” The materials at issue relate to three stories Makuch wrote in 2014 on a Calgary man, Farah Shirdon, 22, charged in absentia with various

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terrorism-related offences. The articles were largely based on conversations Makuch had with Shirdon, who was said to be in Iraq, via the online instant messaging app Kik Messenger. With court permission, RCMP sought access to Makuch’s screen captures and logs of those chats. Makuch refused to hand them over. RCMP and the Crown argued successfully at two levels of court that access to the chat logs were essential to the ongoing investigation into Shirdon, who may or may not be dead. They maintained that journalists have no special rights to withhold crucial information. Backed by alarmed media and free-expression groups, Makuch and Vice Media argued unsuccessfully that the RCMP demand would put a damper on the willingness of sources to speak to journalists. The conflicting views will now be tested before the Supreme Court.

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In his initial ruling, Superior Court Justice Ian MacDonnell said the screen shots were important evidence in relation to “very serious allegations.” MacDonnell also said the public had a strong interest in the effective investigation and prosecution of such allegations. The Ontario Court of Appeal agreed, rejecting Vice’s arguments that the prosecution should have to prove the requested information is essential to the RCMP case. It also said MacDonnell had been aware of the potential “chill” effect — that sources may not be willing to speak to reporters if they risk exposure. Chris Ball, a spokesman for Vice said the outlet was “thrilled” by the willingness of the

WHITE PASS SANTA TRAIN

Supreme Court to get involved. “This has been a long battle so far, not only for our journalist Ben Makuch, but for all journalists and protecting their ability to do their jobs without fear of interference by the state,” Ball said. The legal battle has been playing out against a backdrop of uncertainty as to whether Shirdon is dead or alive. American military officials said over the summer that Shirdon was killed more than two years ago. The statement came just months after the U.S. State Department listed him as a designated terrorist, suggesting he was still alive. Efforts by The Canadian Press to clear up the confusion foundered

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when the military stood by its position and the State Department referred queries to the “intelligence community,” and then pointed to the U.S. National Counterterrorism Centre, which did not respond. Vice said recently it would drop the appeal if the RCMP dropped its production order given Shirdon’s reported death. RCMP and prosecution, however, citing the confusion, refused. Makuch, who has said he published all information relevant to the public, said Thursday the ongoing battle has not been easy. “This has taken a personal toll on me,”

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Makuch said. “This isn’t over. I have to keep on fighting this for not just myself, but for other journalists in this country.” Members of a coalition that supported Makuch, including Canadian Journalists for Free Expression, Reporters Without Borders and News Media Canada, have condemned the lower courts for failing to recognize the importance of journalistic source protection.

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Saturday, December 9th Skagway, Alaska White Pass Train Depot – 2nd Avenue

Family and Friends are welcome to join Santa for a complimentary ride! Santa arrives at 11:00 AM AKT in Skagway, Alaska. Train will depart as soon as Santa has visited with all the children (please arrive no later than 11:45 AM AKT if you plan to ride the train) • Children 18 and under must be accompanied by an adult. • Dress warmly and bring blankets to get cozy. • THIS IS A FAMILY FRIENDLY EVENT, PLEASE BRING YOUR CHRISTMAS SPIRIT AND REFRAIN FROM BRINGING YOUR ALCOHOLIC SPIRITS ABOARD.

ANNUAL FIBER ARTS SHOW

Saturday, December 2 • 9AM to 2PM White Pass Depot, Skagway, Alaska Check out the creative handiwork of local fiber artists!

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Friday, December 1, 2017

WHITEHORSE

LION’S CLUB AUCTION DECEMBER 2ND

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4:00 pm to midnight

Phone: 456-2700 or 1-855-528-3998 to place your bids!

Broadcasting live beginning at 4:00 pm on Community radio CJUC 92.5 FM


Friday, December 1, 2017

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13

B.C.’s mental health detention system violates charter rights: report Geordon Omand Canadian Press

VANCOUVER ritish Columbia needs to overhaul a mental health system that allows psychiatric facilities to detain people with little justification, to deny them access to a lawyer and to take away their personal clothing as a form of punishment, a legal advocacy group says. The Community Legal Assistance Society published a report titled “Operating in Darkness” on Wednesday, which describes B.C.’s mental health detention regime as one of the most regressive in Canada. The report says the province’s Mental Health Act allows people in care to be put in solitary confinement, strapped to a bed or given involuntary treatments like drugs and electroconvulsive therapy. Report author Laura Johnston said it is “extremely unusual” for a provincial mental health act in Canada not to prohibit the discipline of patients who are being held without consent. “Not only does our act not prohibit it, but it actively authorizes it,” Johnston said, adding that disciplinary measures include the use of restraints, solitary confinement and withholding personal clothing. “You can ‘earn your way’ back up to your clothing access by good behaviour. But bad behaviour, you can lose your rights to clothing,” she said, describing the practice as disturbing. The society, a non-profit group that provides legal services to people in mental health detention, has launched a charter rights court challenge against the provincial government over the same issue. The group started the court action in September 2016 on behalf of two people being treated against their will, arguing that B.C.’s laws deprive involuntary patients of their rights to equality and life, liberty and security of the person.

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The Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions responded to Wednesday’s report in a statement, saying it welcomes feedback from groups that have experience with such issues. “Our government established a dedicated Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions to give this area the attention it deserves, and to make a difference for the people and families suffering without the kind of support they need,” the statement says. The ministry declined further comment because of the legal action before the court. While voluntary mental health detentions have remained stable at about 17,000 per year over the past decade, the number of involuntary detentions spiked from about 11,900 to more than 20,000 over the same time period, the report says. Female patients routinely have their clothes removed by male staff, doctors can make detention decisions without conducting in-person exams and there is no legal aid for patients at the time they are detained, the report says. Johnston dismissed

what she called a widely held view that people can only be detained if they are deemed to be an imminent threat to themselves or others. Involuntary detention can occur if it is believed someone may “deteriorate” without in-hospital treatment, which is a much lower standard, she said. One of the features that sets B.C. apart from mental health regimes in other Canadian jurisdictions is the absence of a regular review process, Johnston added. “That is the main point of this report: Who’s looking at this system? Who’s monitoring this system?” she said. A lack of oversight makes it difficult to understand why detention numbers are rising so steeply and whether policies such as solitary confinement or restraint are successful, she added. The report calls for an independent commission to overhaul the B.C. Mental Health Act, and makes a number of recommendations, including better training for health-care providers, regular detention review hearings and the re-establishment of an independent mental health advocate.

RADON GAS not in my house

You can’t see, smell or taste it. But it is the second leading cause of lung cancer, and it can enter Yukon homes anywhere it finds an opening at ground level. The challenge, as with any unwelcome visitor, is getting it to leave! WHAT IS IT? Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that comes from the ground and can collect in houses.

COMMON RADON ENTRY RY POINTS 1 Soil 2 Cracks in the floor and walls connected with the soil 3 Gaps around pipe fittings and support posts in the foundation

WHAT’S WRONG 4 Floor drains and sump pits WITH IT? Radon gas can break down into radioactive particles that can be inhaled and increase your risk of lung cancer. Your risk of cancer depends on several factors: the level of radon in your home, how long you are exposed and whether you smoke (exposure to radon and tobacco use together can significantly increase your risk of lung cancer).

2

1 4

3

WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT RADON? 1. Inform yourself by visiting www.takeactiononradon.ca 2. Test your home 3. Contact a certified radon professional at www.c-nrpp.ca/find-a-professional

FREE RADON TEST KITS, provided by Yukon Lung Association, AVAILABLE in communities starting November 14. Radon Test Kits are available in Yukon Housing Community Offices in: • Carcross • Faro • Mayo • Teslin • Dawson • Haines Junction • Ross River • Watson Lake Beaver Creek: Buckshot Betty’s Restaurant Burwash Landing: Kluane Energy Café & Store Carmacks: Tatchun Centre

Destruction Bay: Talbot Arm Motel Old Crow: Health Centre

Whitehorse: Radon Test Kits are available at Home Hardware Electrical Services Counter with a $10.00 subsidy from Yukon Lung Association For further information call 867-456-6778. Limited quantity for each community. Available while supplies last. 8 pm Friday, December 15 (Sing Along Event) 8 pm Saturday, December 16 (Concert Event) Whitehorse United Church, 601 Main Street Tickets: $22 Adults; $16 Students/Seniors Available at www.yukontickets.com and Yukon Arts Centre | General Seating Sponsors: Herb and Dorreene Wahl Memorial Fund

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Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

Prosecutor seeks maximum fine against RCMP in deadly 2014 Moncton shooting spree

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You’re invited to the Council of Yukon First Nations’

OPEN HOUSE Thursday, December 14, 2017 2:30PM - 4:30PM 2166-2nd Avenue Whitehorse, YT

Andrew Vaughan/CP

Emergency response officers enter a residence in Moncton, N.B. on June 5, 2014. Kevin Bissett Canadian Press

MONCTON, N.B. prosecutor is asking for the maximum fine against the RCMP for Labour Code convictions stemming from gunman Justin Bourque’s 2014 Moncton, N.B., rampage that left three officers dead and two injured. Crown prosecutor Paul Adams said a $1 million fine would amount to “a clear declaration of disapproval” of RCMP conduct that left its officers outgunned and ill-prepared. The force knew of the need for better weaponry seven years before the Moncton shootings, he told Moncton provincial court judge Judge Leslie Jackson Thursday. “There was a confusing lack of urgency in dealing with this type of risk,” he said. Bourque had targeted police officers in the hopes of sparking an anti-government rebellion. Constables Fabrice

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Gevaudan, Dave Ross and Doug Larche were killed, while constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen were injured in the shootings. Defence lawyer Mark Ertel suggested a penalty of $500,000, much of it as donations to groups suggested by the Crown. Jackson convicted the national police force in September of failing to properly equip and train its members. The judge was given victim impact statements from the wives of two fallen officers on Thursday. One of them, Angela Gevaudan, said in a recording that as a dispatcher with the Moncton-area Codiac detachment, she was aware of safety concerns for officers prior to the June 2014 shooting. “I feel there was not an appropriate process to address those concerns,” she said. Gevaudan said there needs to be an independent process to monitor and address safety concerns.

She said that knowing there were safety concerns and not being able to have them addressed only increased her mental suffering and she now suffers from PTSD. Adams told Jackson that if the RCMP officers had the proper training and equipment, it would have been “a game-changer.” “They (the force) was responsible to prepare the officers to deal with this situation, which they failed to do,” Adams said. Adams also asked that the RCMP be ordered to make a public statement on what measures have been taken since the Moncton tragedy. Ertel said since 2014 the force has made a clear acceptance of responsibility. He said the introduction of carbine rifles “could” have made a difference, but the Crown did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that they “would” have made a difference. Bourque pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 75 years.

More Information? Visit www.ascnwt.ca

CALL FOR COACHES

2018 NATIONAL ABORIGINAL HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIPS May 4-14, 2018 | Membertou, NS

ASCNWT is accepting applications for the following 6 volunteer positions: 2018 Team North Male Team 1 Head Coach 2 Assistant Coaches 2018 Team North Female Team 1 Head Coach 2 Assistant Coaches

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Friday, December 1, 2017

Early signs show vulnerabilities to high debt, housing has eased: central bank

WHERE

DO I GET THE

NEWS? The Yukon News is available at these wonderful stores in Whitehorse:

Andy Blatchford

HILLCREST

Canadian Press

Airport Chalet Airport Snacks & Gifts

OTTAWA he Bank of Canada is flagging the steady climb of household debt and still-hot housing markets as the financial system’s top vulnerabilities — but it’s also seeing some early signs of improvement. In a report Tuesday, the bank said there’s some evidence Canada’s exposure to these persistent trouble spots has begun to ease, thanks to healthy job creation, tightening housing policies and higher mortgages rates. The assessment is part of the bank’s semi-annual review, which explores key vulnerabilities and risks surrounding the stability of the financial system. It describes vulnerabilities as pre-existing conditions that could amplify or propagate economic shocks. “Overall risks to the Canadian financial system remain elevated. Some preliminary signs of improvement, however, are emerging,” the bank said in its latest financial system review. “Better economic conditions and several new policy measures support prospects for additional progress.” The report said indebtedness, especially the number of highly indebted households, remains high. Household debt relative to income has reached historically lofty levels and continues to grow, the bank said. But it noted there’s already some green shoots

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that suggest stricter lending rules have started to reduce the country’s exposure to hefty debtloads. The report pointed to mortgage insurance policy changes, which included a stress test, introduced by the federal government a year ago. The bank predicted further easing is likely on the way due to higher interest rates and another new stress test to be introduced in the new year, this time aimed at low-ratio mortgages that don’t require insurance. In January, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions will implement new lending guidelines that will require borrowers who do not require mortgage insurance to show they would still be able to make their payments if interest rates were to rise. The Bank of Canada has raised its benchmark rate twice since July and experts predict it’s likely to continue along a gradual hiking path. The combination of these factors is also expected to reduce household imbalances by applying downward pressure on prices in major real-estate markets like Vancouver and Toronto. Still, the bank’s report carefully noted that it’s uncertain exactly how borrowers and lenders will react to the incoming OSFI measures. “Our financial system continues to be resilient, and is being bolstered by stronger growth and job creation — but we need to continue to watch finan-

cial vulnerabilities closely,” Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said Tuesday in a statement. In the report, the bank once again listed cyber threats as another key vulnerability for Canada. Poloz has said a cyberattack against the financial system is a scenario that likely troubles him the most. In a recent interview, he said he was unsure how severe the fallout from such an event could be and he struggled to picture what it might look like. “Cyberattacks do not respect borders: they can originate from outside Canada and be transmitted across the global network that financial institutions rely on to operate their businesses,” the report said. The bank said it has been working with industry, international organizations and federal and provincial authorities to improve collaboration and policy-making to ensure rapid response and recovery from a cyber event. An example could include a loss of connectivity or corruption of data within the payments system. The report also assessed how the biggest risks facing Canada have evolved since its last update in June. It said the chances of a severe nationwide recession or a drop in global growth triggered by a significant financial disruption in an emerging market, like China, remained elevated. However, the bank added that the chances of these scenarios playing out were decreasing.

Concentrate on the news that matters.

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YUKON NEWS

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‘Open banking’ holds promise but cybersecurity fears loom for Canadian banks Armina Ligaya Canadian Press

TORONTO s banks work to fortify their cybersecurity defences amidst a growing number of data breaches, they are also exploring the promise of so-called “open banking,” a concept that could finally disrupt the staid financial services industry. Customers have increasingly moved away from physical branches towards online and mobile apps, but banking has yet to reach its “Uberization” moment, one that breaks down traditional models to usher in new innovations, as Uber has done for the taxi industry. Open banking — granting third-parties like financial technology startups access to bank data to develop innovative apps — could be such a ”game changer,” according to Toronto Dominion Bank’s chief information officer, Jeff Henderson. All but one of 100 pay-

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ment executives at major banks globally said they were planning major investments in open banking by 2020, according to an online survey by consulting firm Accenture released last month. But even as Canadian financial institutions toy with the idea, they’re concerned about the looming risk to consumers’ personal information amid the growing threat of cyberattacks. The Accenture survey also showed that 50 per cent of respondents said that implementing the emerging concept increases risk. “There’s no question this is a trend,” TD’s Henderson said. “(But) I want to make sure that any time we exchange information externally, that is done so in a very controlled and understood manner.” In these early days, the exact nature of the innovation in the open banking landscape is unclear, said Bob Vokes, managing director of financial services at

Accenture in Canada. “What we’re trying to do in open banking is to create new sets of services off of the banking data, or alternatively, allow you to manipulate your banking information in a different way,” he said. Open banking allows consumers to share their banking data, which proponents say will spur the creation of new apps and platforms that will make financial transactions easier or develop new use cases. For example, a consumer could log into one app and see all their financial accounts, from various banks, to get a full picture of their net worth and move funds in real time. Or, geolocation data could be layered over payment data, allowing a consumer to analyze exactly where their money is being spent, while also allowing merchants to offer them location-based rewards. The buzz around open banking is building just as concerns about cybersecurity mount.

Most recently, Uber announced earlier this month that hackers compromised some 57 million user accounts and Equifax Inc. disclosed in September a cyberattack that compromised the personal information of half of Americans and some 19,000 Canadians. It also comes as the Bank of Canada once again listed cyber threats as a key vulnerability for the Canadian financial system in its semi-annual review released Tuesday. “The high degree of financial and operational interconnectedness among financial institutions means that a successful cyber attack against a single institution or a key service provider could spread more widely within the financial system.” Meanwhile, various jurisdictions are pushing ahead with legislation that would see financial institutions become even more interconnected. By January 2018, banks in Europe will be required

to share proprietary data, in a regulated and secure way, under the U.K.’s Open Banking Standard and Europe’s PSD2 legislations. Canadian institutions are also jumping on board. The Competition Bureau said in a report on fintech earlier this month that it is early days “but the potential impact on competition and innovation is promising.” The Ministry of Finance said in August it is “examining the merits of open banking.” “Open banking holds the potential to make it easier for consumers to interact with financial service providers and increase competition,” the ministry said in a consultation paper as part of a review of the federal Bank Act. The Canadian Bankers Association responded to the ministry that while its members are proponents of innovation, they are also concerned about the potential impacts on safety, soundness and stability in Canada’s financial system.

“Canadian banks have devoted very significant resources to creating well-established information security and data warehouses that meet the highest standards worldwide, the CBA said. “Any initiative that could undermine this trust would be very problematic for Canadian consumers, financial market participants and the broader economy.” Vokes says these concerns — as well as questions about whether the bank or the third party is liable if something goes awry — will need to be addressed in legislation. If additional layers of security protection are put in place, open banking should not raise the level of cybersecurity risk, he said, adding however, that cyberattackers are becoming more sophisticated as well. “Innovation isn’t just the purview of fintechs,” he said. ”As we continue to innovate, fraud and criminal enterprises are also innovating.”

Crown says B.C. ex-Mountie accused of sexual assault painted woman as instigator Camille Bains Canadian Press

VANCOUVER retired RCMP inspector had a mistaken belief that a civilian employee consented to sexual activity in a washroom at the force’s British Columbia headquarters, the Crown says. Michelle Booker said Wednesday that Tim Shields did not take any steps to see if the woman provided consent for him to allegedly kiss and grope her in 2009. Shields, 52, was charged with one count of sexual assault in May 2016 and has pleaded not guilty. Provincial court has heard that the woman, who cannot be identified under a publication ban, filed a civil lawsuit against the RCMP and Shields in 2014 that was settled in December 2016. The complainant provided a statement to police in 2015 as part of a code of conduct investigation but Booker said the court must not use the delay to gauge her credibility because that would be relying on myths and stereotypes about when complainants should disclose their experience. She asked Judge Patrick Doherty to be guided by “common sense and a painstaking, careful, repeated testing of the evidence to see

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how it stacks up.” “In the Crown’s submission, the evidence of Mr. Shields does not stack up,” Booker said during closing arguments. “The Crown has proven that Mr. Shields has sexually abused (the complainant) beyond a reasonable doubt.” Court has heard both Shields and the woman exchanged flirty emails before the alleged assault, which occurred in either in April 2009 according to Shields, or in September that year based on the woman’s testimony. Booker said that while defence lawyer David Butcher questioned the woman’s credibility, Shields’s evidence related to the alleged assault in a ground-floor unisex washroom eight years ago contained far too much detail to be believable. The woman has testified Shields told her he had something important to tell her and that she followed him into the washroom she’d never seen, before he locked the door. She said she was “frozen and confused” when he touched her breasts, unbuttoned her pants and put her hand on his genitals. However, Shields has testified the woman went further and “actively and enthusiastically” had sex with him and made no attempt to

escape from the washroom. “This is his evidence about what transpired in the bathroom,” Booker said. ”It is extraordinarily detailed. It is a mechanical rendition of what went on and I say it is unreasonable and not believable.” Shields has testified the complainant often walked into his office and hugged him, starting with friendly embraces that became more sexual, along with the conversation. Booker said Shields portrayed the complainant as the initiator, instigator and aggressor while painting himself as the victim of her advances who simply reacted to the woman’s actions. “He’s reconstructed and rehearsed what took place,” Booker said. “Her unshaken evidence is that she did not consent.” Butcher told the court on Tuesday that there is no basis for the Crown’s argument that Shields abused his position of authority to coerce the woman into the washroom. “Mr. Shields says she’s a fraud, a liar and a perjurer,” he said in closing submissions. “Mr. Shields asks the court to positively find there was actual consent in this case.” Shields joined the RCMP in 1996 and was promoted to

inspector in 2009. He was the Mounties’ media spokesman in B.C., and was suspended with pay in May 2015 in

the middle of the code of conduct investigation. He left the force in December of that year.

The lawyers will be back in court on Friday to set a date to hear the decision from the judge.

NOVEMBER IS MAKE A WILL MONTH FREE INFORMATION SESSIONS Wills for People Under 40 November 22 at Baked Cafe (7-9pm) Wills and Enduring Powers of Attorney November 30 at Skookum Jim Friendship Centre (6-8pm) (6-8pm) Centre (Food od provided) prrovi (Food provided) pr

FOR MORE INFORMATION GO TO: WWW.JUSTICE.GOV.YK.CA CALL 867-667-8050


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YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

Threat reduced to B.C. coast as fuel barge on its way to safe haven

DEC 7-20

SPRUCE BOG’S

Canadian Press

BELLA BELLA, B.C. loaded fuel barge that broke away from its tug off British Columbia’s central coast was being towed to safety on Monday as the threat of a spill diminished, officials said. The barge, loaded with 3.5 million litres of diesel and 468,000 litres of gasoline, was set to anchor off Campbell Island in the Inside Passage. A U.S.-registered tugboat, the Jake Shearer, was pushing the barge through Queen Charlotte Sound when it broke free southwest of Bella Bella on Sunday. Roger Girouard, assistant coast guard commissioner, said the vessel encountered strong seas and suffered damage, which broke the pin arrangement connecting the tug to the barge. “The control of the barge was lost and the barge started drifting onto the B.C. coast,” he said. On Sunday evening, the barge crew laid an anchor, which held and kept the barge off the rocks near Goose Island, Girouard said. He said coast guard resources, including the Norman Reid, arrived on the scene in stormy weather. A decision was made to let the anchor hold as conditions were expected to improve. “We watched and were

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Officials say a loaded fuel barge that broke away from its tug off British Columbia’s central coast is now being towed to a safe location and no pollution has been observed. The Zidell Marine 277 is seen in rough waters off the B.C. coast. ready just in case the anchor did drag, but it did not,” he said. The tugboat Gulf Cajun picked up the barge — identified by the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre as the Zidell Marine 277 — and it was scheduled to reach its destination off Campbell Island on Monday evening. Washington state-based Harley Marine Services owns both the tug and barge. Vice-president of safety Rich Softye said the incident is regrettable. “We’re doing a full investigation to make sure that if there’s anything that is a problem on the operation side that could have been changed, we will change,” he said. The company was also speaking with the man-

ufacturer of the linking system, he said. He said the company has been using so-called articulated tug barges — where a tug pushes a barge rather than pulls it — for years and has never had any safety issues. “We were hit by a couple of very large waves, cross-wise, from the port side that caused everything to be slammed over,” he said. “With that, the separation took place.” Articulated tug barges are more fuel-efficient and require fewer crew members than traditional tugboats, but they are more difficult to control in rough seas or bad weather, said Mike Fitzpatrick, president and CEO of Robert Allan Ltd., a naval architecture and marine

type of vessel has along Canadian waters,” he said. Heiltsuk First Nation Chief Marilyn Slett said her community is still recovering from last year’s spill and this latest incident shows a response centre is needed on the central coast. She called on the federal government to help fund an Indigenous response centre that would have equipment and vessels as well as training and certification for its members. “We can’t continue to hope, as we did last night when the anchor dropped,” she said. “We have to do better than that. We have to make sure the infrastructure and capacity are in our communities.”

Pre-Apprenticeship Oil Burner Mechanic

First Nations Christmas Craft Fair

February 5, 2018 to June 22, 2018 Where: Ayamdigut campus, Whitehorse

The Oil Burner Mechanic Pre-Apprenticeship program is to provide students with: • Theoretical trade knowledge which, together with handson shop experience, will enable students to go on to train for employment as capable and knowledgeable Àrstyear apprentices. • Developed competencies in job safety skills and awareness of workplace hazards. • Acquired skills and knowledge to make a successful transition to an entry-level position in the work force. • Complete the theoretical and practical requirements for OBT Level 1 Apprenticeship, and the opportunity to challenge the Oil Burner Mechanic Apprenticeship Level 1 exam.

Saturday, December 9

th

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Elijah Smith Elementary School 1399 Hamilton Blvd Come on out to have some tea with bannock and support Elijah Smith Elementary in their fundraising efforts!

Carving Traditional Beadwork Tlingit Weaving Table Bookings Concession by donation: Bannock & Tea Please contact Silent Auction Holly Legge Raffle Baskets 667-5992

engineering firm. “If you’re in really rough weather, barges need to be towed. If you’re in sheltered waters, they can be pushed,” he said. Girouard said the tug was en route from Seattle to Alaska and was in international waters, defined as being more than 12 nautical miles from Canada’s shoreline, when it hit heavy weather. After the Nathan E. Stewart sank near Bella Bella and spilled 110,000 litres of diesel last year, greater restrictions were placed on access to Canadian waters by U.S. tugboats, he said. “This, along with the Nathan E. Stewart spill, will cause us to take a look at the spectrum of rules and the guidance that this

Also, APPRENTICESHIP LEVEL 1 April 16, 2018 to June 22, 2018 Get updates monthly! Sign up for our e-newsletter at yukoncollege.yk.ca/ce

For more information please contact Sponsored by Elijah Smith Elementary School

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December 4 Standing Committee At 5:30 pm in City Hall Council Chambers: Delegates – Taxi Safety for Women – Trail Development Policy & Trail Application Process; Public Input Report – Capital Budget 2018 to 2021; Write-off Uncollectible Accounts; Contract Award – Council Chambers Audio-Visual Upgrade; Budget Amendments – Water and Waste Operating Budget – Parks Operating Budget; Change of Scope – Robert Service Campground Project; Zoning Amendment – Tiny House Development; Telecommunication Antenna Structures Siting Policy; Parkade Bylaw; Maintenance Bylaw Amendments; Community Standards Bylaw. Draft agenda subject to change. For more details, visit: whitehorse.ca/ agendas whitehorse.ca/CASM


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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Trump tweets strain US-Britain ‘special relationship’ Jill Lawless Associated Press

LONDON few days after his inauguration, U.S. President Donald Trump stood beside British Prime Minister Theresa May in the White House and proclaimed the strength of the “most special relationship� between their two countries. Ten months later, that relationship looks decidedly strained. As May and Trump traded criticism Thursday over his retweets of a far-right group’s anti-Muslim videos, British lawmakers labeled the U.S. leader a hate peddler. They also urged May’s government to revoke an invitation for Trump to visit Britain as a guest of Queen Elizabeth II. The furor erupted after Trump, who has almost 44

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million Twitter followers, on Wednesday retweeted three anti-Muslim videos posted by a leader of the far-right group Britain First. The tiny group regularly posts inflammatory videos purporting to show Muslims engaged in acts of violence, but without providing context or supporting information. The U.K. ambassador in Washington, Kim Darroch, complained to the White House, and May’s spokesman said the president was wrong to retweet the group’s content. Trump responded with a tweet urging May to focus on “the destructive Radical Islamic Terrorism that is taking place within the United Kingdom� instead of on him. May countered Thursday that “we take the need to deal with the terrorist threat very seriously� and rebuked the leader of Brit-

ain’s closest ally. “The fact that we work together does not mean that we are afraid to say when we think that the United States have got it wrong and to be very clear with them,� May said Thursday during a visit to Amman, Jordan. “I am very clear that retweeting from Britain First was the wrong thing to do.� London Mayor Sadiq Khan was one of many politicians urging the government to scrap the still-unscheduled state visit by Trump that first was announced during May’s trip to Washington in January. Khan, the British capital’s first Muslim mayor, said the American president had promoted “a vile, extremist group� and an official visit by him “would not be welcomed.� In the House of Commons on Thursday, law-

US putting off planned ban on its use of cluster bombs Robert Burns Associated Press

WASHINGTON he Pentagon has put off indefinitely a planned ban on using certain cluster bombs, which release explosive sub-munitions, or bomblets. The U.S. military considers them a legitimate and important weapon, although critics say they kill indiscriminately and pose hazards to civilians. A 2010 international treaty outlaws the use of cluster bombs, but the U.S. is not a signatory. The George W. Bush administration declared in 2008 that by Jan. 1, 2019 the United States would continue its use of cluster bombs only if they met a performance standard of failing to detonate one per cent or less of the time. That standard is important because armed and unexploded cluster munitions left on the battlefield pose a long-term hazard to civilians. Tom Crosson, a Pentagon spokesman, said that despite efforts to develop more reliable, and thus safer, cluster munitions, the U.S. military has been unable to produce bombs with failure rates of one per cent or less. He said it’s unclear how long it might take

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to achieve that standard, and thus the Pentagon concluded in a months-long policy review that it should set aside the 2019 deadline and allow commanders to authorize the use of the weapons when they deem it necessary. A new Pentagon policy approved Thursday erases the 2019 deadline and asserts that the weapons are legitimate, not necessarily a humanitarian hazard, and important for wartime attacks on “area targets� like enemy troop formations. The new policy authorizes commanders to approve use of existing cluster bombs “until sufficient quantities� of safer versions are developed and fielded. “Safer� means meeting the 1 per cent failure standard or developing bombs equipped with a self-destruct mechanism or that can be rendered inoperable in 15 minutes or less by the exhaustion of their power source. The policy does not define what qualifies as “sufficient quantities� of safer weapons, and it sets no new deadline. In practice, the U.S. rarely uses cluster bombs. The Pentagon says its last large-scale use was in the 2003 Iraq invasion. They could be considered important for use in a large-scale conflict such as

a ground war against North Korea. In a memorandum signed Thursday, Deputy Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan said the U.S. remains committed to fielding weapons that are effective in war and that “minimize unintended harm� to civilians and U.S. and partner forces. “Although the (Defence) Department seeks to field a new generation of more highly reliable munitions, we cannot risk mission failure or accept the potential of increased military and civilian casualties by forfeiting the best available capabilities,� Shanahan wrote. “Cluster munitions are legitimate weapons with clear military utility,� Shanahan wrote. He also asserted that cluster munitions “may result� in less unintended harm to civilians and others than if other types of weapons have to be used instead against certain targets like massed formations of enemy troops and time-sensitive or moving targets. The new policy is likely to draw criticism from disarmament groups and some members of Congress. By law, the U.S. cannot provide cluster munitions to other countries unless they meet the one per cent failure standard.

makers criticized Trump in unusually blunt language. Labour’s Naz Shah accused him of promoting “the hate-filled ideology of fascism.� Conservative Tim Loughton said Twitter should take down Trump’s account for peddling “hate crime.� The chill between London and Washington could not come at a worse time, as Britain prepares to leave the European Union and forge new economic relationships around the world. May was the first world leader to meet with Trump after he took office in January partly because Britain is eager to strike a free trade deal with the U.S. after it leaves the EU in 2019. But the prime minister’s bid to nurture a close relationship with the unpredictable president has not gone according to plan. Trump greeted May

with warm words, and even briefly held her hand as the two leaders walked along a colonnade at the White House. Within hours of May’s departure, Trump signed an order banning travel to the U.S. from several majority-Muslim countries. House of Commons Speaker John Bercow said soon afterward that Trump would not be invited to address Parliament during his state visit, an honour given to President Barack Obama and other world leaders. Analysts predicted Thursday that the trans-Atlantic relationship would be strong and important enough to survive the current strain “The core U.K.-U.S. special relationship is co-operation in nuclear weapons, special forces and intelligence,� said Tim Oliver, an expert in Europe-North America rela-

tions at the London School of Economics. “That core has traditionally been protected from the vagaries of presidential and prime ministerial relations. “Trump, however, is testing it in ways we’ve not seen before.� Emily Thornberry, the Labour Party’s foreign affairs spokeswoman, said May had made an error of judgment in inviting Trump so soon after he took office. “We ought to be holding him at arm’s length,� Thornberry told Sky News. “She’s put the queen in this incredibly invidious position.� May insisted Thursday that the visit was still on — though she suggested it was not imminent. “An invitation for a state visit has been extended and has been accepted,� she said. “We have yet to set a date.�

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AT BAKED CAFÉ ON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2017 6:00PM TO 9:00 PM For or more information please pleas contact Katie Johnson at (867) 332 5283 or at bellaeliteconsulting@gmail.com bellaeliteconsulting@gmail co

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Friday, December 1, 2017

Report on sexual assaults in Arctic rocks Norway Jan M. Olsen Associated Press

COPENHAGEN enerations of native Sami people living in remote northern Norway have been victims of rape and child sex abuse that has gone largely unreported and uninvestigated, police have acknowledged in a report citing deep failings in the way authorities operated there. A police report covering the period from 1953 to August 2017 documented at least 151 sexual assaults, including 43 rapes, in the Arctic municipality of Tysfjord, which has a population of less than 2,000. Most of the cases were not

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reported at the time. The youngest of the 82 victims identified by the police was 4, while the 92 suspected offenders were aged between 10 and 80. Some people appeared on both lists. As well as the rapes, 40 cases dealt with sexual intercourse with underage children. So far two people have been charged in 10 cases, but many cases have been dropped because the statute of limitations has expired. The report by the Nordland police, where Tysfjord sits, was commissioned after Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang last year published accounts of 11 men and women who claimed to have been

assaulted. Tone Vangen, head of the Nordland county, apologized after the publication of this week’s report, acknowledging that police “didn’t do a good job.” Vangen told Norway’s NTB news agency that police had heard “tales from victims that offenders had gotten forgiveness from religious circles and the cases have in a way been settled.” She added that they saw that many had links to a conservative Lutheran revival movement started in Lapland in the middle of the 19th century. “There is no reason to claim that ethnicity or belief is an explanation

Annual Christmas Feast!

Friday, December 8th, 2017 @ 7:00pm Coast High Country Inn, Whitehorse Please bring a non-perishable item for donation to the Food Bank.

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advocate for children and young people in Norway. Verdens Gang reported the case of a woman identified as Liv who said her father was jailed for raping her, but that other men raped or sexually assaulted her over a 10-year-period until she turned 19. Karl Edvard Urheim, a Sami folk singer who also said he was raped as a child, told the daily that “people there are incredibly good at shutting up, and that makes me angry.” An estimated 40,00060,000 Sami live in northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia and have their own language. Their situation has been compared to that of American Indians, but rather

than establishing reservations for Sami, the region’s governments have sought to absorb them. In 1997, Norway’s King Harald V publicly apologized on behalf of the nation for its treatment of the Sami. Samis have their own Parliament, and those in Norway are also represented in Norway’s Parliament. A small number of them are still closely associated to nature and are involved in reindeer herding but also fishing, fur-trapping and hunting. However, their way of living has threatened by mineral mining, wind farms and extensive logging, which are encroaching upon reindeer herding grounds and fishing areas.

Eni receives federal permit for US Arctic offshore drilling

Na Cho Nyäk Dun Council Invites its Citizens and their families living in Whitehorse to the

for the abuses,” she said. “At the same time there are mechanisms related to the (Sami) environment, which makes it difficult to get to investigate.” Lars Magne Andreassen, a spokesman for the local Sami community, cited “loyalty, lack of confidence in authorities and the fact that police and health and social services have not had competence to see what has happened” as responsible for the perpetuation of the situation. “There has been a huge failure in the whole safety net that should have been around the children who have been subjected to abuse in Tysfjord,” added Anne Lindboe, the children’s ombudsman — an

Dan Joling Associated Press

ANCHORAGE subsidiary of an Italian energy company has received a federal permit to drill the first oil exploration wells in U.S. Arctic waters in two years. The federal Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement announced Tuesday it has approved an application from Eni U.S. Operating Co. Inc. to drill exploratory wells in the Beaufort Sea. Drilling could begin next month from Spy Island, a gravel artificial island in state waters about 3 miles (4.8 kilometres) off the coast near Prudhoe Bay. Eni will use extended-reach drilling techniques to reach federal submerged lands.

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The drilling would be the first in federal Arctic waters since Royal Dutch Shell in 2015 sent down an exploratory well in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northwest coast. Former President Barack Obama last year banned oil and gas exploration in most of the Arctic Ocean. President Donald Trump in April ordered Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke to review the ban with the goal of opening offshore areas. Environmental and Alaska Native groups in May sued to maintain the ban. Environmental groups strongly opposed Arctic Ocean drilling. In a statement, Kristen Monsell, an attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, said drilling threatens coastal Arctic wildlife. “The Trump administration is risking a major

oil spill by letting this foreign corporation drill in the unforgiving waters off Alaska,” she said. “Offshore drilling threatens coastal communities and wildlife and will only push us deeper into the climate crisis.” Mark Fesmire, BSEE’s Alaska region director, said in the announcement that agency staff conducted a thorough review of Eni’s well design, testing procedures and safety protocol. Eni already has production wells on the 11-acre (.04-square kilometre) Spy Island built in state waters 6 to 8 feet (1.8 to 2.4 metres) deep. It’s one of four artificial islands in the Beaufort Sea that support oil production. A subsidiary of Houston-based Hilcorp has proposed a fifth island in federal waters as part

of its Liberty Project, a facility that could hold production wells, a processing facility and the start of an undersea pipeline carrying oil to shore and connections to the trans-Alaska pipeline. Eni plans four exploration wells. Exploratory well operations will add at least 100 jobs, the company said. Production could lead to as many as 150 jobs in the region and 20,000 barrels of oil per day, according to the company. The permit was issued as Congress considers opening additional onshore Arctic drilling within an Alaska wildlife refuge. Congressional Republicans are pushing for lease sales on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to help pay for President Donald Trump’s proposed tax cut.

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Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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THE ARTS

Hanging around I

f you have ever wondered how to dangle precariously from two silk ropes secured to a ceiling or flip gracefully through a hanging hoop, aerial circus training sessions would be for you. At least a dozen people were up for the high flying class organized by the Yukon Circus Society and taught at a Yukon Arts Centre studio last month. Acrobatic hopefuls learned how to climb and pose in silk ropes, trapeze, and aerial hoop, as well as some floor acrobatics and juggling.

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Monika Kozlerova and Orion Wanner try out a two-person pose on the aerial hoop while at an aerial circus class in Whitehorse on Nov. 27.

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Anna McEachern learns a pose on the silk ropes as instructor Kieran Wolfe guides her.

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Chris Lovatt learns a new trick on the trapeze during an aerial circus class at Yukon Arts Centre studio.

Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Left: Students stretch after a couple of hours of learning how to use silk ropes, trapeze and aerial hoop. Right: Chris Lovatt learns a new trick on the trapeze.


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yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

Coco draws Latino audiences, others with theme of family Russell Contreras Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. he day before Thanksgiving, a predominantly Latino audience packed an Albuquerque theatre on Route 66 to catch the U.S. premiere of Coco. In San Jose, California, multi-generational Latino families came together to see the movie. At the Vineland Drive-In outside of Los Angeles, Mexican-Americans in trucks and vintage cars sat outside then took selfies with the movie’s

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posters. “Coco,” one of the largest U.S. productions ever to feature an almost entirely Latino cast, is drawing large audiences among Latinos for its depiction of Mexican culture at a time when many feel uneasy about their place in the nation’s policies, including immigration. In the Pixar animated film’s opening week, Latino families crowded theatres from Houston to Phoenix and posted photos and comments about the movie’s references to Pedro Infante and painter Frida Kahlo. They took note of the mention of chancla (flip-flops used by Mexican mothers to also discipline children) and urged others to see the film, too. “It was a great way to spend the holiday in light of everything that has been going on,” said Jennie Luna, a Chicana/o Studies professor at California State University, Channel Island. She saw the film with her mother, grandmother and 3-year-old niece. “It was representative and well done. We

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were excited to see people like us in a movie.” “Just watched Disney’s and Pixar’s movie #Coco with the family!” Retired Mexican American NASA Astronaut Jose Hernandez tweeted on Friday. “What a well done movie that respects our culture!” “Coco,” which opened last Wednesday in the United States, is Pixar’s first feature film with a minority lead character. The English-language version is sprinkled with bilingual dialogue and set in a pueblo that resembles a town in Mexico or a village in northern New Mexico. The animated film opened to the fourth best Thanksgiving weekend ever with an estimated $72.9 million over the five-day weekend. That total easily toppled Warner Bros.’ “Justice League.” Centred on the Mexican holiday Dia de Los Muertos (Day of the Dead), Coco has already set box office records in Mexico, where it has made $53.4 million in three weeks. The movie follows Miguel, a 12-year-old Mexican boy with the heart of a musician born in a family that has prohibited music for generations. After fighting with his family, Miguel slips into a wondrous netherworld where he

depends on his long-dead ancestors to restore him to the land of the living. Characters in the English version of the movie are bilingual and drop references to pan dulce (Mexican pastries) and various foods. Spirits had to “crossover” from the land of the dead to the land of the living — an allusion to the U.S.-Mexico border. Coco comes after Disney’s sucessful Moana — a computer-animated movie featuring a girl from a Polynesian village. That movie garnered mostly positive reaction from Polynesian audiences in 2016 and used consultants to make sure the film was culturally sensitive. Lina Maria Murillo, 36, of San Jose, said Coco’s early success showed that a film that used predominantly Latino characters who are bilingual could do well in the U.S. Because those references are so rare in mainstream movies it was special to see them in a movie with a strong storyline, she said. Murillo took her husband and two daughters to see the film Sunday. Her daughters, Samaralucia, 8, and Isamaria, 6, had wanted to see it since viewing the previews, Murillo said. After exiting the Span-

Last Minu e Chris maF Sale

ish-language version of the movie around 11 p.m., the girls began asking about deceased family members on the way home, Murillo said. “My parents emigrated from Colombia and my husband’s family goes with many generations in El Paso….so this movie hit all the connections,” Murillo said. “It moved me to tears.” Alexandro José Gradilla, a Chicana and Chicano Studies professor at California State University, Fullerton, saw the film on its opening night with his wife and daughter. After discussing the movie with extended family during Thanksgiving, he went to see the movie again with those who hadn’t seen it yet. “It’s striking a nerve at the right time,” Gradilla said. “And people were posting their photos on social media to document it.” For Disney, the positive reaction from Latinos was a remarkable turnaround from four years ago when production came under scrutiny after Disney sought to trademark “Dia de los Muertos,” the name of the traditional “Day of the Dead.” Disney Enterprises Inc. dropped its trademark filing after

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fiery social-media posts charging Disney with culturally appropriating the holiday. Disney had hoped to secure name rights for merchandise such as snack foods and Christmas ornaments as it partners with Pixar Animation Studios Inc. Mexican-American cartoonist and humorist Lalo Alcaraz was one of those critical of Disney’s trademark try. But after he created a cartoon of a skeletal Godzilla-sized Mickey Mouse destroying a city, Disney hired him as a cultural consultant for the project. Alcaraz said he and others helped Pixar make a film that Latinos felt wasn’t stereotypical or demeaning. As the film was set to be released in the U.S., he asked his fans to tweet pictures of their families at theatres. “That’s why we did it,” Murillo said. “It was like we were part of something.” Hispanics made up 23 per cent of frequent moviegoers last year. Disney didn’t share ethnic demographics for Coco ticket buyers, but the movie was No. 1 at the U.S. box office and performed well elsewhere, like in China where it made $18.2 million.

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Friday, December 1, 2017

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African music star in exile awaits real change for Zimbabwe Andrew Selsky Associated Press

EUGENE, ORE. s Zimbabweans celebrated the ouster of dictator Robert Mugabe, they danced on the streets to previously banned protest songs by one of the country’s most famous musicians — a man jailed by the country’s former white rulers and hounded by the black government that succeeded them. The musician, Thomas Mapfumo, watched the euphoria from exile in the U.S. But he’s not rejoicing — because Mugabe’s political party and his cronies still run the country. “I think there’s nothing to celebrate about,” Mapfumo said this week in an interview with The Associated Press in the college town of Eugene, Oregon where he has lived since 2004. “It’s still the old train that we’re riding but they’ve got a different driver now.” When Mugabe resigned on Nov. 21 under military pressure, ending his iron-fisted rule of 37 years,

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Mapfumo’s songs blasted from car speakers to the crowds partying on the streets. For years, his music had been banned from public airwaves and was played in secret by Zimbabweans. With Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF, still in power, there’s no sign Zimbabwe will overcome its long history of repression and political corruption, Mapfumo said. Former Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa, now the party head, was sworn in as president on Nov. 24. Nicknamed The Crocodile, he is accused of helping direct the slaughter of thousands of people in ethnic massacres in the 1980s. “The root cause of our problems is ZANU-PF. There are still people who still believe in those bad policies,” Mapfumo said, citing in particular the takeover of white-owned farms — many of which went to Mugabe’s allies — that led to the collapse of Zimbabwe’s agricultural production. Zimbabweans are electrified about the possibility of Mapfumo returning

home to perform with his band, The Blacks Unlimited, for the first time since 2004, when he left the country with band members and relatives. “I thought we will never see him play here again, but now I am very hopeful he will return home for a show of our lives,” said Shupai Muchingami, a fan in Harare, Zimbabwe’s capital. Mapfumo, known as the Lion of Zimbabwe, confirmed to AP that his manager is trying to arrange a gig in the southern African country. His upbeat music, featuring the traditional mbira thumb piano and an electric guitar tweaked to sound like an mbira, often carried lyrics of rebellion in the Shona language and in English. He called the musical style he invented “chimurenga,” which means “struggle” in Shona. During the guerrilla war against the white racist regime when the country was named Rhodesia, Mapfumo sang lyrics like “Mothers, send your sons to war” in support of the struggle. After Zimbabwe

Russell Simmons steps down from companies amid allegation Mark Kennedy Associated Press

NEW YORK ussell Simmons has stepped away from his companies following a second allegation of sexual misconduct, though the Def Jam founder again denied ever being violent. Rachel Getting Married screenwriter Jenny Lumet — the daughter of filmmaker Sidney Lumet — wrote an essay published by The Hollywood Reporter on Thursday in which she recalled a night around 1991 when Simmons took her to his New York apartment and had sex with her, despite her repeated demands that he stop. “I desperately wanted to keep the situation from escalating. I wanted you to feel that I was not going to be difficult. I wanted to stay as contained as I could,” she writes. Simmons said in a statement released after the essay’s publication that Lumet’s memory of the night is “very different” from his, but it’s clear to him “that her feelings of

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fear and intimidation are real.” He apologized for being “thoughtless and insensitive” in some of his relationships. He said he would resign from his businesses because, “I don’t want to be a distraction.” Lumet wrote that she never told anyone about that night until last month after allegations lodged against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein unleashed a torrent of stories about sexual misbehaviour in multiple fields. Lumet said she went public after model Keri Claussen Khalighi said Simmons coerced her to perform a sex act and later penetrated her without her consent in his New York apartment in 1991. Simmons, 60, denied those allegations, saying everything that occurred between himself and Khalighi was completely consensual and with her “full participation.” He suggested that Khalighi’s accusation came from feeling shame. “I’m deeply saddened and truly shocked to learn of Keri’s assertions as to what happened over the

course of that weekend,” Simmons said in the statement. He later wrote that he “never committed any acts of aggression or violence in my life” or would “never knowingly cause fear or harm to anyone.” Def Jam Recordings was founded in 1984 by Simmons and Rick Rubin, making stars of such hip-hop artists as LL Cool J, Slick Rick, The Beastie Boys and Public Enemy. Its roster currently includes Kanye West, Justin Bieber, Frank Ocean, Alessia Cara, Jeremih, Jeezy, Iggy Azalea, Big Sean and 2 Chainz. Simmons’ empire includes the Argyleculture clothing line, Rush Communications, yoga centres, the energy drink Celsius and the film and television production company Def Pictures. Simmons is the latest figure in the entertainment world to have their careers derailed by accusations of misconduct, a list that includes comedian Louis C.K., Pixar and Disney Animation chief John Lasseter, actors Kevin Spacey and Jeffrey Tambor, writer-director James Toback and NBC anchor Matt Lauer.

achieved independence, he performed in a 1980 celebration concert that also featured Bob Marley. But several years later, Mapfumo became disenchanted with the government as Mugabe and his ministers enriched themselves while Zimbabweans became more destitute. His most politically charged anti-Mugabe songs included “Masoja neMapurisa” (“Soldiers and Police”), “Pidigori waenda” (“The Man is Gone”), “Vanoita sevanokudai” (“They Pretend to Love You”) and “Corruption .” “When I see something wrong I have to point it out,” Mapfumo said. “I can’t stand by and look when these things are happening to my people. That’s not what we fought for. We fought in the struggle because we wanted to be a free nation. We were fighting for democracy, for freedom of speech, freedom of movement.” Zimbabwe, he said, might need a mass revolt to usher in true democracy. “The country belongs to the people. The soldiers won’t do nothing if the

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people revolt. They will just stand by,” Mapfumo said in the interview in his small apartment. Mapfumo, who drives a Dodge minivan in Eugene, still chafes at the government’s confiscation of several of his BMWs in Harare years ago, which he labeled as government harassment. “The reason was because I was singing against the ruling party, the government and the corruption that was going on,” he said. A friend was later told he could collect the cars for Mapfumo, but they were gone when he went to get them. “They’d been sold by a corrupt policeman,” Mapfumo said.

Mapfumo believes Zimbabwe needs young leaders and said he admires Nelson Chamisa of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party. But Mapfumo ruled out performing in support of him or any other politician. Mapfumo plans to keep up his criticism in a new album he’s working on that includes a song he wrote shortly before Mugabe resigned. He sang part of it during the interview. “Rise up Zimbabwe, wake up Zimbabwe, open your eyes,” Mapfumo sang in a deep voice. “It’s all about fighting against corruption, fighting against injustice, bad rule of law,” he said with a smile.

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This one-day course is intended for anyone interested in learning more about Yukon First Nations and Self-Government. Develop a broader understanding and appreciation for the key moments in Yukon First Nations distant and recent past, in a day that includes interactive activities, discussions and presentations by staff in the Yukon First Nations Initiative department at Yukon College. The instructors incorporate historical timelines, facts, personal stories, and activities for an engaging look at history and recent developments. “This was an excellent workshop that covered a huge amount of material in a short amount of time, but did it so well! Appreciated the openness and humour. Amazing instructors/facilitators that enhanced learning for everyone.” ~ Past Participant CRN 10446 | Dec 6 | 8:30am-4:30pm Location: Yukon College

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Registration: Please call Admissions to register at 867.668.8710 and quote the Course Registration Number (CRN) listed above. Withdrawal Policy: Please notify the Admissions Office, in person or by telephone, five business days prior to the course start date to allow for a refund. If you withdraw fewer than five business days before the start of a course, you will forfeit the course fee. For more information on the Northern Institute of Social Justice and courses offered: Visit our website: yukoncollege.yk.ca/nisj Call: 867.456.8589 Email: nisj@yukoncollege.yk.ca Northern Institute of Social Justice


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LIFE

YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

A cold and lonely place to die

Marina McCready Special to the News

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n remote Bathurst Island in the central Arctic archipelago, there’s a national park that has seen just four visitors since its creation in 2015. In mid-September, the cruise ship Ocean Adventurer crossed the Parry Channel to visit one of Canada’s newest national parks — Qausuittuq. The park was created primarily to protect the calving and wintering grounds of the endangered Peary Caribou herd. It would be the northernmost point of our journey at 76 degrees north. As we approached Bathurst Island the temperature outside was -10C and we encountered newly-formed sea ice that was thin, clear and very flexible. It was interesting to watch it flex with wave action created by the ship. The zodiacs had no problem breaking through this ice and we were taken ashore to explore. I had opted for a long hike and our route took us up a ridge made entirely of sedimentary rocks of various sizes. From the ridge we spotted both a lone muskox and a large herd across the valley and a few Peary caribou further away on the tundra. There were lots of polar bear tracks and a few places where a female bear had been digging in the snow drifts on the steep slope checking out possible denning sites. We also saw small flocks of snow buntings feeding on grass seed in the bare patches at the base of the

Marina McCready/Yukon News

Headstones mark snow covered graves on Beechey Island with Devon Island in background. ridge. With winter just around the corner I was amazed these little birds were still this far north. Perhaps they were just as amazed to see us. After travelling overnight through Barrow Strait, we dropped anchor off Beechey Island, a starkly beautiful and desolate spot connected by a narrow strip of land called a tombolo to Devon Island (the largest uninhabited island in the world). Beechey is the site of three graves from the Franklin Expedition. The sailors buried here died in the first year of the expedition while the crews overwintered near this

spot in 1845-46. Beechey Island gained international attention in 1987 when Canadian forensic anthropologist Owen Beattie published a book called Frozen in Time in which he detailed how he and a team had exhumed the three bodies and performed autopsies in tents at the site. Other than elevated lead content in their bodies and evidence of lung disease, Beattie and company discovered nothing that categorically pinpointed why these three young men died so early in the expedition. Researchers speculated that traces of lead in their bodies may have come from soldering

used to close the cans of food taken on the expedition. When we went ashore it was cold, windy, and a little foggy, creating an eerie scene around the graves. Looking around at the landscape with its massive width of stark rocky beach and backdrop of craggy rock cliffs, I was struck by the overwhelming vastness and barrenness of this location. The Franklin crews must have been saddened to bury their friends in such a hostile and alien location. One of the men buried here — John Hartnell — had a brother named Thomas on the expedi-

tion. When his body was exhumed researchers noted John was wearing a shirt embroidered with the initials TH. It may have been the loving act of a grieving brother to use his own shirt to clothe his younger brother prior to burial. While the crew wouldn’t have known it at the time, these three who died so early in the expedition were probably the lucky ones. We now know that many of the remaining 131 men died long and painful deaths by starvation, and some even resorted to cannibalism in a last desperate attempt to survive. Leaving the graves, we

walked down the beach about a kilometre to the ruins of Northumberland House. This structure was built from wood scavenged off a wrecked whaling ship in 1852 by the crew of HMS North Star, who were searching for the Franklin expedition. The building was stockpiled with food in case the missing crews made it back. Time and the environment have not been kind to this structure. All that is left standing is a partial wood frame and a stone wall. Evidence of coal can still be seen where it was piled behind the building. Barrel staves, bits of cans and scraps of wood litter the ground everywhere around the ruin. When it was time to leave I dragged my feet as I slowly approached the zodiacs — taking time to examine some of the many fossils visible on the beach. Looking at rocks containing fossilized coral and sea creatures from a southern clime juxtaposed with the desolate High Arctic environment was a surreal experience. While we had come to see historic artifacts less than 200 years old, the story here goes back millions of years to a time when this island and the tectonic plate it sits on were close to the equator before continental drift brought it all the way to this polar region. Both the island and the men who died on it travelled a long way. Marina McCready is a Whitehorse based freelance writer and photographer. This piece is third in a five-part series.

Marina McCready/Yukon News

Left: The remains of Northumberland House stand on Beechey Island. Right: The Ocean Endeavour is seen through the frame of what little still stands of the Northumberland House.


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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Post-Weinstein, Lauer: A reckoning for fans of fallen heroes Leanne Italie Associated Press

NEW YORK hen it comes to fandom, it’s reckoning time for Matt Lauer, Garrison Keillor and scores of other men accused of sexual wrongdoing. Hero celebrities have fallen before — Bill Cosby’s career ended after assault allegations in 2014 — but never in the rapid succession that has rocked so many worlds since revelations about Harvey Weinstein exploded in October. Accusers of politicians, actors, comedians, singers, producers, directors, other media powerhouses and assorted business moguls have taken the power and fans of the disgraced have largely stood with the wronged. But for some, giving up heroes isn’t easy. Savannah Guthrie, in breaking the news Wednesday on NBC’s Today show about Lauer’s firing over “inappropriate sexual behaviour” with a colleague, appeared to be on the verge of tears. “How do you reconcile your love for someone with the revelation that they have behaved badly, and I don’t know the answer to that,” she said. “But I do know that this reckoning that so many organizations have been going through is important, it’s long overdue and it must result in workplaces where all women — all people — feel safe and respected.”

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Paul Booth, an associate professor of media and cinema studies in the College of Communication at DePaul University in Chicago, said some fans derive a piece of their identity from those they admire. “Certainly to a lot of fans, fandom feels like something that you almost don’t have control over, that what you’re a fan of is part of who you are as a person,” he said. On social media and around the dinner table, many fans are in mourning. But in the Arizona border town of Douglas, 37-year-old Nubia Romo isn’t ready to dump Lauer. “Oh my goodness, I’ve woken up to the Today show for years. It’s so, so, so sad. My mother is really sad, too, but we don’t have his side of the story,” said Romo, who is studying to become a real estate agent. Booth’s academic focus includes fan mentality, along with the social media hive mind. While Romo said she was shocked that Lauer would be accused, hardcore fans, including those of Lauer but also of Louis C.K. and Kevin Spacey, may have had an inkling of rumoured transgressions beforehand, choosing in the past to let the negative slide until allegations were pushed into full view, he said. “For many fans, these are not necessarily new stories,” Booth said. “One of the things about being a fan is that you learn the minutiae of a star. Although some of

these stories are just coming out in the mainstream media, they have been circulating in fan circles for a while. Rumours about Kevin Spacey have been out and about in fan conversations for many years. Certainly Louis C.K.’s misconduct and harassment has been jokingly referred to by a lot of fans.” Letting go of longtime heroes can be a process, said Booth, other pop culture experts and women’s rights activists. “I think all of us are going to struggle with people who we looked up to and have done really good things,” said Linda Sarsour, co-chair of this year’s Women’s March in Washington. “I can think of people like Al Franken and John Conyers and I’m so hurt and disappointed, but we’re going to have to reckon with the issue and how it’s impacted the victims and not our personal heroes.” The range of emotions among fans of Louis C.K. and the more recently accused — Lauer, Charlie Rose and Keillor — among so many others, continued to flow Wednesday. Susan Scharf, a 69-yearold retired teacher in suburban New York, said she’s a longtime Lauer fan and was “very, very shocked and disappointed,” echoing what others also have pondered: “I thought he was a nice guy. As a woman, I can’t support him now.” In Royal Oak, Michigan, Lauer fan Amy Hurley, a 45-year-old administrative

Nathan Congleton/NBC

Matt Lauer on the set of the Today show in New York. NBC News fired the longtime host for “inappropriate sexual behavior.” assistant for General Motors, put it more succinctly: “Is every man a hypocrite?” Outrage, sadness, frustration, shock and the craving to gather and share are common denominators among fans. On Twitter, one angsty Louis C.K. die-hard in Egypt, using the handle @MilanistaFito, relied on the fictional Showtime series The Affair and the character Dr. Vic Ullah to help him articulate: “I remember that scene from The Affair where a character says, ‘If you think, on balance, that the good I do outweighs the bad, I’m a good person. If you think the bad outweighs the good, the opposite is true.’ And I believe that the good C.K. does outweighs the bad.”

Thousands of miles away, continents collided in the brain of comedian Sarah Silverman, Louise C.K.’s friend of 25 years, when she broke her silence in an emotional monologue before an episode of her Hulu talk show, “I Love You, America.” “Some of our heroes will be taken down, and we will discover bad things about people we like, or in some cases, people we love,” she said. While thousands stand with accusers and wish Lauer and others who have toppled a bitter farewell, Hilari Vires, of Scottsburg, Indiana, feels as Romo does about one of the big faces of Today. “I honestly think that people should not judge or hate on him until there is

proof regarding the accusations,” she said. “Even if he did the things he’s accused of, I don’t think he’s a bad or evil person.” Bridget Barisonek, 42, of St. Paul, Minnesota, is a huge Keillor fan. She has listened to his former radio show, A Prairie Home Companion, for 20 years and has seen the show live several times. “I want to trust public figures. I want to trust somebody who leads what is essentially wholesome family entertainment,” she said. “Tremendous disappointment. And like almost a sense of loss. “ The process for some looking in from the outside as non-fans is void of heartbreak. “Sorry to straight people who keep finding out their heroes suck but you should’ve listened to gays and worshipped 52-yearold actresses who specialize in monologues about their crumbling marriage,” tweeted comedy writer, entertainment journalist and the sometimes pop culture podcaster Louis Virtel. In a recent interview, Virtel said fall they must. “There’s always this ongoing conversation on separating the art from the artist,” he said. “As somebody whose heroes have never turned into sexual predators I find it a pretty mundane conversation. It’s a conversation usually started by men who think the only form of universal genius out there is stuff given to us by men.”

Coming to WGH for a lab test? We are making changes to serve you better. Effective December 13, 2017, when coming to the hospital for a laboratory service such as routine blood work, patients will proceed directly to the lab reception counter for registration. This means you no longer have to register for lab services at the main Admitting & Discharge desk. To help accommodate this change, the lab will be closed from 2:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, December 6 and resume regular hours from 7:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, December 7.

Vous venez à l’HGW pour effectuer un test en laboratoire? Nous apportons des changements pour mieux vous servir À partir du 13 décembre 2017, les patients qui viennent à l’hôpital pour effectuer des tests de routine comme des analyses sanguines devront se présenter directement au service de laboratoire. Les inscriptions ne se feront plus au comptoir des admissions et des congés. Le service de laboratoire sera fermé de 14 h à 16 h 30 le mercredi 6 décembre pour faciliter la transition. Les heures normales, de 7 h à 16 h 30, reprendront le jeudi 7 décembre.

yukon hospitals hôpitaux du yukon

whitehorse general hospital hôpital général de whitehorse


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YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

All about recalls

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utomotive recalls are defined as a notice of defect or notice of non-compliance, and are issued by vehicle manu-

WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY

House Hunters

Advertise your Home in 3 issues (3 consecutive weeks)

for only $60+GST PHONE: 867-667-6283

facturers when a safety problem is identified on a particular model. Recalls affecting drivers could also include things like tires and child car seats. Safety-related defects are usually common to a specific group of vehicles. They are generally issues that without warning may pose a safety risk for drivers. Potential recalls could include: • Steering components that may fail suddenly, causing loss of vehicle control, • Problems with fuel system components that may cause vehicle fires, • Electronic Stability Control (ESC) systems that activate when not required resulting in a loss of vehicle control, • Wiring problems that may lead to a fire or a sudden loss of lighting, • Air bags that deploy when they should not, • Child restraints or car seats with defective harness systems, buckles or components, • Improperly designed or constructed tires that may fail unexpectedly, • Critical components that may fail causing loss of vehicle control, or injury

Whitehorse United Church

601 Main Street 667-2989 (Union of Methodist, Presbyterian & Congregational Churches) 10:30 am - Sunday School& Worship Service Rev. Beverly C.S. Brazier

Grace Community Church

8th & Wheeler Street | 668-2003 | Pastor Jim Joe 10:30 am FAMILY WORSHIP WEEKLY CARE GROUP STUDIES Because He Cares, We Care.

Our Lady of Victory

(Roman Catholic) 1607 Birch Street | 633-2647 Saturday Evening Mass: 7:00 pm Confessions before Mass or by appointment. Daily Weekday Mass: Mon-Fri 7:00 pm Monday 7:30 pm Novena Prayers & Adoration | ALL WELCOME

to people inside or outside the vehicle. All vehicle manufactures have recalls from time to time. Some are minor and others can be very serious. Poor handling of recalls by some manufacturers in the past have proven to be very costly and damaging to company reputations. As a result, manufacturers today seem to err on the side of caution with any potential recalls. Road safety is a shared responsibility between vehicle manufacturers, Transport Canada and vehicle owners. According to the requirements of the Motor Vehicle Safety Act: “Motor vehicle manufacturers are responsible for notifying vehicle owners when a safety-related defect has been identified in one or more of their vehicle models. This notification must be in the form of a Notice of Safety Defect, which is also referred to as a recall notice and which must contain three pieces of information. “The notice must describe the defect, present an evaluation of the safety risk arising from it, and provide directions on how

Riverdale Baptist Church

15 Duke Road, Whse | 667-6620 | www.rbchurch.ca Sunday Worship Service: 10:30 am

ing of the problem and the potential risk to safety. At times the investigations may lead to safety recall campaigns or safety advisory publications.” Transport Canada does not regulate the actions of vehicle owners but does urge vehicle owners to understand their responsibilities and to act on them in a timely manner. As a vehicle owner you are responsible for helping ensure their own safety, the safety of passengers, and other drivers. It’s important to keep your contact information updated with your vehicle manufacturer or their local dealership. This ensures they can reach you, and notify you of any potential recalls. Once notified it’s very important to follow the instructions and have the recall completed as soon as possible. When you are considering buying a used vehicle it’s important for you to know if there are any outstanding recalls on the vehicle and details of any recall. Is the vehicle safe to drive before the recall is performed? How long before the recall can be completed? Is there any cost to the recall? If you’re

Religious Organizations & Services

Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church Whitehorse Baptist Church 4th Avenue & Strickland Street 668-4079 tlc@northwestel.net pastor.tlc@northwestel.net EVERYONE WELCOME! 10:00 am

the defect can be corrected. Usually, the correction consists of a repair that is carried out free of charge by the vehicle manufacturer.” Vehicle manufacturers get the names and addresses of owners affected by recalls on new vehicles from buyer warranty registrations. Motor vehicle registration records may also be used to help find owners who may have moved and not updated their contact information with their dealer. Transport Canada is responsible for regulating the safety of the newly manufactured vehicles sold in Canada. Its defect investigations group is mandated under the Motor Vehicle Safety Act to investigate complaints relating to reported manufacturing safety defects: “Complaints are documented in a database and then reviewed by an experienced analyst. When warranted an investigation will be initiated to further research the problem. During the investigation process we work closely with consumers, dealers, forensic scientists, manufacturers and others to obtain a clear understand-

2060 2ND AVENUE • 667-4889

www.whbc.ca Family Worship & Children’s Ministry Sundays 9:00 am & 11:00 am

St. Nikolai

Bethany Church

A not-for-prophet society.

332-4171 for information | www.orthodoxwhitehorse.org

canadian afÀliation information: northstarpylon@gmail.com

Yukon Bible Fellowship

Quaker Worship Group

Rigdrol Dechen Ling, Vajra North

Church of The Nazarene

Church of the Northern Apostles An Anglican/Episcopal Church Sunday Worship 10:00 AM Sunday School during Service, Sept to May BISHOP LARRY ROBERTSON 45 Boxwood Crescent • Porter Creek • 633-4032 • All Are Welcome

ECKANKAR

Religion of the Light and Sound of God For more information on monthly activities, call (867) 633-6594 or visit www.eckankar-yt.ca | www.eckankar.org ALL ARE WELCOME.

Bahá’í Faith

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints

Saturday Vespers 5:00 pm Sunday Liturgy 10:00 am FR. JOHN GRYBA

website: quaker.ca

Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 am Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 pm Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 pm

The Temple of Set

The World’s Premier Left Hand Path Religion

Meets regularly for Silent Worship. For information, call 667-4615 email: whitehorse-contact@quaker.ca

Calvary Baptist 1301 FIR STREET | 633-2886 | Pastor L.E. Harrison 633-4089

Box 31419, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 6K8 For information on regular community activities in Whitehorse contact: 867.393.4335

Orthodox Christian Mission

RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS

Catch Driving with Jens on CHON FM Thursdays at 8:15. If you have any questions or comments you can reach out to Jens Nielsen at drivingwithjens@gmail.com, Facebook or Twitter: @drivingwithjens.

Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada First Service 10:00 - 11:00 am Sunday School (ages 0-12) 10:00 - 11:00 am Second Service 11:30 am - 12:30 pm 91806 Alaska Highway | Ph: 668-4877 | www.bethanychurch.ca

Pastors: REV. GREG ANDERSON & MICHELLE DREWITZ AfÀliated with Canadian Baptist Ministries and Canadian Baptists of Western Canada

FOURSQUARE GOSPEL CHURCH 160 Hillcrest Drive | Family Worship: Sunday 10:00 am PASTOR SIMON AYRTON PASTOR RICK TURNER www.yukonbiblefellowship.com

buying a used vehicle from a reputable car dealership they will likely have already checked this for you. If you are buying a used vehicle in a private sale you can check for recalls with the manufacturer’s local dealership or you can check online yourself. To check for recalls either at a dealership or online you will need the VIN or vehicle identification number. You can find it near the very bottom of the windshield on the driver’s side or on the door frame. While there are several different websites offering recall information if you want to check yourself, it’s likely best to just check the road safety recalls database on Transport Canada’s website. Taking the time to ensure your contact information is up to date and acting on recalls immediately will help ensure road safety for everyone and offer some peace of mind.

www.xeper.org

whitehorselsa@gmail.com

Meeting Times are 10:00 am at 108 Wickstrom Road

The Salvation Army

Buddhist Meditation Society

311-B Black Street • 668-2327

Meditation Drop-in • Everyone Welcome! Mondays 5:15 to 6:15 pm (Except Stat Holidays) 403 Lowe Street | www.vajranorth.org | 667-6951

Sunday Church Services: 11:00 am

Seventh Day Adventist Church Christ Church Cathedral Anglican

EVERYONE WELCOME!

Yukon Muslim Association

2111 Centennial St. (Porter Creek) Sunday School & Morning Worship - 10:45 am Call for Bible Study & Youth Group details PASTOR NORAYR (Norman) HAJIAN www.whitehorsenazarene.org | 633-4903

1609 Birch St. (Porter Creek) | 633-5385 | All are welcome. “We’re Open Saturdays!” Worship Service 11:00 am Wednesday 7:00 pm - Prayer Meeting

Dean Sean Murphy, Rector | 668-5530 4TH AVENUE & ELLIOTT STREET Sunday Communion Services 8:30 & 10:00 am Thursday Service 12:10 pm (Bag Lunch) OFFICE HOURS: Mon-Fri 9:00 am to 12 Noon

1154c 1st Ave • Entrance from Strickland www.yukonmuslims.ca For further information about, and to discover Islam, please contact: Javed Muhammad (867) 332-8116 or Adil Khalik (867) 633-4078 or send an e-mail to info@yukonmuslims.ca

First Pentecostal Church

Sacred Heart Cathedral

TAGISH Community Church

Hope Community Church

www.tagishcc.com | 867-633-4903

Meets each Saturday at 1:00 pm for Worship Service. Please join us at the log church across from the RCMP station. Call Pastor Wade Holmes at 332-9768 for more info.

149 Wilson Drive 668-5727 Sunday 10:00am Prayer / Sunday School 11:00 am Worship Wednesday Praise & Celebration 7:30 pm Pastor Roger Yadon

(Roman Catholic)

4th Avenue & Steele Street • 667-2437 Masses: Weekdays: 12:10 pm Saturday 5:00 pm | Sunday: 9:00 am - English; 10:10 am - French; 11:30 am English

Meets 1st & 3rd Sunday each Month Service starts at 4:00 pm Details, map and information at:

CARCROSS


Friday, December 1, 2017

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Renewable energy isn’t perfect, but it’s far better than fossil fuels

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n their efforts to discredit renewable energy and support continued fossil fuel burning, many anti-environmentalists have circulated a dual image purporting to compare a lithium mine with an oilsands operation. It illustrates the level of dishonesty to which some will stoop to keep us on our current polluting, climate-disrupting path (although in some cases it could be ignorance). The image is a poor attempt to prove that lithium batteries and renewable energy are worse for the environment than energy from oilsands bitumen. The first problem is that the “lithium mine� is actually BHP Billiton’s Escondida copper mine in Chile (the world’s largest). The bottom image is of an Alberta oilsands operation, but it’s an in situ underground facility and doesn’t represent the enormous open-pit mining operations used to extract most bitumen. Lithium is used in batteries for electric cars, cellphones, computers and other electric devices, as well as power-grid storage systems, because it’s light and highly conductive. Most lithium isn’t mined. More than 95 per cent comes from pumping underground brine into

pans, allowing the liquid to evaporate and separating out the lithium using electrolysis. Any real comparison between oilsands and lithium batteries shows that oilsands products, from extracting and processing to transporting and burning, are by far the most destructive. Extraction and production destroy habitat, pollute air, land and water and produce greenhouse gas emissions. Burning the fuels causes toxic pollution and wreaks havoc with Earth’s climate. Does that mean batteries are environmentally benign? No. All energy sources and technologies have some environmental impact — one reason energy conservation is crucial. A 2010 study comparing the environmental impacts of electric cars to internal combustion vehicles found the latter are far more damaging, taking into account global warming potential, cumulative energy demand and resource depletion. Battery components, including lithium, can also be recycled, and used electric car batteries can be repurposed to store energy for homes, buildings and power grids. Lithium wasn’t found to be a major environmental factor for electric car batteries, but copper, aluminum, cobalt and nickel used in the batteries have high impacts. Materials used to make other car components, for electric and internal combustion vehicles, also come with environmental impacts. The energy sources used to charge car batteries also determine the

degree of environmental impact. If coal is the main source, negative effects are much higher than if the power comes from hydroelectric or renewables such as wind and solar. But the impacts are still lower than fuelling cars with gas. One study found using lithium for a rapidly expanding electric vehicle market, as well as numerous other products and devices, could cause supplies to become scarce. As with fossil fuels, this means more destructive methods, such as mining, would be required. But these arguments are more against private automobiles than batteries. Electric vehicles

are part of the short-term solution, but reducing environmental damage from transportation, including climate disruption, will require shifting as much as possible to better alternatives such as public transit, cycling and walking. We still need batteries, though. Storage systems are essential to making the best of renewable energy. They make power available when the sun isn’t shining or the wind isn’t blowing. Finding ways to make them — and other renewable energy components such as solar panels and wind turbines — with minimal environmental impact is a challenge.

Some components in electric vehicles and solar panels use “rare metals�, which are often mined in ways that damage the environment and endanger miners. But these materials are frequently used in newer internal combustion vehicles, too. Part of the solution is to improve labour and environmental standards in mining operations — a challenge considering many materials are mined in Africa by Chinese companies that put profit above human health and the environment. The good news is that renewable energy and storage technologies are

advancing rapidly, with attention paid to the environmental impacts of materials used to make them. The ability to recycle batteries and their components is also improving but needs to get better. Renewable energy is already far better environmentally than fossil fuel energy. It’s time to shift from current massive fossil fuel support and subsidies to making renewable energy as clean and available as possible. David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and cofounder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Editor Ian Hanington.

Programme de service Ă la clientèle (anglais/français) Ce cours de 15 semaines est une collaboration entre l’AFY et le Collège du Yukon. Il porte sur le dĂŠveloppement de neuf compĂŠtences essentielles : l’utilisation de documents, la technologie numĂŠrique, l’apprentissage continu, la lecture, l’Êcriture, le calcul, le travail en ĂŠquipe, la rĂŠĂ exion et la communication orale. Dans le cadre de ce programme, les ĂŠtudiants exploreront leurs forces personnelles et reconnaĂŽtront les obstacles Ă l’emploi. Ils auront l’occasion de participer Ă un stage en service Ă la clientèle oĂš ils pourront obtenir une expĂŠrience en milieu de travail, ainsi que suivre une formation en sĂŠcuritĂŠ et des formations en perfectionnement professionnel. • AmĂŠliorer les compĂŠtences essentielles comme la lecture, les mathĂŠmatiques, la communication et l’informatique. • Explorer les possibilitĂŠs de carrière et acquĂŠrir des compĂŠtences professionnelles avec des sections sĂŠparĂŠes en français et en anglais. • Occasion de dĂŠcouvrir plusieurs secteurs d’emploi. Inscrivez-vous en ligne dès maintenant! CRN : 20303 | DurĂŠe : 15 semaines Heures du programme : de 9 h Ă 15 h, du lundi au vendredi Dates du programme : du 8 janvier au 25 avril 2017 Frais de scolaritĂŠ : Appui et allocation Ă€nancière disponible sur demande. Endroit : Collège du Yukon, Campus Ayamdigut CoordonnĂŠes : Contactez StĂŠphanie Bourret, gestionnaire de formation au 668-2663 poste 220 pour des renseignements sur le programme et pour les inscriptions.

‘Tis the Season for Christmas Trees Each year, you can cut two Christmas trees from Yukon vacant public land for your household. When you’re looking for your Christmas tree, please respect property rights, municipal bylaws and zoning. For more information on suitable places to cut your tree, contact the Forest Management Branch at www.forestry.gov.yk.ca Or you can phone 1-800-661-0408, ext. 3999 or visit the folks at the Compliance Monitoring and *OTQFDUJPOT PGmDF JO ZPVS DPNNVOJUZ Have a safe and happy holiday season.

www.yukon-news.com Your Community Newspaper. One Click Away.

WEDNESDAY UĂŠFRIDAY


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Biologist trapper retires after helping transform Aleutians

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n Halloween 2017, Alaskan Steve Ebbert, 56, retired from his job as an invasive species biologist. His longtime mission of removing arctic foxes and other human-introduced species from the Aleutian Islands has left him with a legacy few of us will match. “There are hundreds of thousand more birds flying around on the planet because of that work. That’s a pretty cool accomplishment,” said Steve Delehanty, manager of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, referring to a program that began in the late 1940s. Ebbert took it over in 1995. Ebbert’s job was to reverse another legacy, that of Russian and American fur trappers who, starting in the late 1700s, dropped off a few pairs of arctic foxes on Aleutian islands. Those foxes, later harvested with their offspring for their fur, ate birds and their eggs, removing birds from some of

the richest nesting cliffs and rye grass tangles on Earth. In 1949, Bob “Sea Otter” Jones, a biologist and World War II veteran hired by the refuge, started removing foxes from Amchitka Island. Since then, refuge biologists and hired trappers have returned 48 islands to their fox-free beginnings, first using poison baits and since the 1990s using traps and rifles. In 1995, Ebbert stepped into a dream job for someone who as a teenager trapped muskrats and raccoons in Indiana. In summer of that year, as a start to his career with the refuge based in Homer, he camped on Simeonof Island with three seabird biologists. There, he trapped the last fox that survived a trapping effort the previous year. From there, the burly biologist with a sourdough’s beard planned and helped execute fox removal from different islands in the expansive refuge, which includes the entire sweep of the Aleutian Islands and stretches farther than the distance from St. Louis to San Francisco. Ebbert remembers his summers by the islands he lived on, learning all the grassy bumps, fox trails, conical volcanic mountains and fresh water streams. 1996 was Seguam. Semiso-

Are you planning a multicultural event?

Multicultural associations in Yukon can receive up to $5000 to hold public events or festivities which celebrate and share international cultural traditions with Yukoners. Applications can be submitted any time to the New Canadians Event Fund. More information: artsfund@gov.yk.ca or www.tc.gov.yk.ca/NewCanadians.html

(867) 667-8789 toll free: 1-800-661-0408 ext. 8789 artsfund@gov.yk.ca www.tc.gov.yk.ca @insideyukon

Tourism and Culture

Ned Rozell/Yukon News

Ned Rozell/Yukon News

Steve Ebbert hauls lumber for a cabin refuge staff built on Buldir Island in 2004.

Steve Ebbert and Jeff Williams mark an Aleutian cackling goose nest they found on Nizki Island in 2004.

pochnoi was 1997. The next year was Kanaga. Attu was the year after that. In his 22 years with the refuge, he and his seasonal teams of professional trappers from the USDA cleared 18 islands of foxes. The islands ranged in size from Rootok (3,345 acres) to the farthest island in the chain, Attu (almost a quarter million acres). Put all those islands together and the restored Aleutian land is the size of the Anchorage bowl. As the foxes disappeared, the birds returned. Heather Renner is a bird biologist who was Ebbert’s supervisor. She remembers visiting Attu in 2003, right after foxes were removed from the mountainous island. “We were doing a bird survey by skiff and we found the first Aleutian cackling goose nest since foxes were eradicated,” she said. “If you go to Attu now, the valleys are deafening with the noises of Aleutian cackling geese.” That bird, similar to a Canada goose but with a shorter neck, was thought to be extinct before 1962, when Bob Jones found a few dozen on Buldir, a rugged and isolated island between Kiska and Shemya that had no foxes. Refuge biologists captured a few, bred some in captivity, and later released them on fox-free islands. Today, more than 150,000 Aleutian cackling geese nest in the Aleutians and winter in California and Washington. The bird moved off the endangered

species list in 2001. Renner thinks more islands could start to resemble Buldir, home of the largest and diverse bird colony in the northern hemisphere. She knows Ebbert had a lot to do with it. “We all wish we could leave the refuge a better place, and he’s one of the people who can retire knowing he did.” She also appreciated that, on a staff dominated by bird biologists, Ebbert saw things through the eyes of that boy who received $7 for every muskrat he pulled from Indiana ditches. “Steve had a different skillset than your typical refuge biologist,” she said. “He was exactly what we needed. And he was alway the guy, who, if there was an oil spill (like when the Selendang Ayu broke in two off Unalaska Island in December 2004), he’d be the one to drop everything and go. Because of that, he knew the refuge better than anybody.” Over the phone from Indianapolis, where he was visiting his father and brothers on the family farm, Ebbert said his timing for retirement was good, in part because he had trapped himself out of a job. All of the do-able islands with problem foxes have been done, he said. He also designed and helped finish plans to remove European rabbits from Poa Island and hoary marmots from Sud Island in 2010. In 2008, a team of partners killed all the

Norway rats on the former Rat (now Hawadax) Island. One of Ebbert’s favorite memories is of a mission he designed to live-capture and transport a special group of birds from Attu to Agattu. Evermann’s rock ptarmigan exist only in the far-west Aleutians. When foxes came to Agattu in the 1800s, the birds disappeared. But they endured on Attu, perhaps because they could hide in the spacious mountains while foxes spent most of their time near the beaches. In 2004, Ebbert enlisted grouse expert Clait Braun, wildlife veterinarian Bill Taylor and volunteer Pat Pourchot to catch ptarmigan amid the rusting frames of Jeeps and other World War II relics on Attu. Using a 16-foot pole with a slipnot noose on one end and carpets that snagged ptarmigan toes, the men captured 27 birds. The crew of the refuge boat the Tiglax then transported the birds across 30 miles of North Pacific Ocean to Agattu, where foxes had been removed 40 years earlier. The birds have a new foothold on the island, as many thousands of seabirds and songbirds now do on Aleutian islands that are becoming greener (from the added fertilizer) and louder each summer. “I think it is one of the great conservation stories,” said Jeff Williams, assistant manager of the refuge who has stepped foot on each of the affected islands. “It has

returned to what it was.” Trapping foxes off islands large and small “seems easy to do, but it’s not,” Williams said. “You need a person with drive and persistence. Tanaga, for example, took like six years of going back there to get the last couple pairs of foxes.” Ebbert will miss living on islands few people will ever see, but knows he will enjoy the lifetime of Saturdays ahead. He will also miss working off the Tiglax, with its able, professional crew, including a cook serving up fine breakfasts and dinners. He forged a special bond with the hired trappers with whom he would share an island for a summer. For entire summers, pairs of men would be in their own territories, executing their duties on a wet, windy, often chilly island. Just like old-time trappers, two or three times each summer the trappers would walk to an island landmark to meet up with the others for a “rendezvous.” When Ebbert remembered those men, he might have been speaking of himself. “No matter how old they are, they’ll be able to point at a map and tell their kids and grandkids, ‘I made that island fox-free.’” Since the late 1970s, the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.


Friday, December 1, 2017

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Celebrating 40 years of celebrating Yukon’s history

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his year the YHMA, or Yukon Historical and Museums Association, is celebrating its 40th anniversary. There is a story about how the society got its name. At the founding meeting, which took place March 12, 1977, Peggy Crook, the chair of the gathering stated that the organizing committee had come up with the name Yukon Museums and Historical Association, or YMHA. Flo Whyard quickly pointed out that the YMHA was the Yukon Mental Health Association, so they switched the second and third words in the name to ensure that there would be no confusion between the two organizations. Looking now at the photographs of the organizing group, I see that many of them have passed away during the intervening 40 years. There is Flo Whyard, a true champion of Yukon history, especially of George and Martha Black. In the photo is Al Wright, author of Prelude to Bonanza, and a great inspiration for my own dream of becoming a writer. While still working in Ottawa, I learned that he was visiting the city, so I tracked him down and asked him to autograph my copy of his newly minted book. We got together, and when he offered me a glass of whisky. I accepted without protest my first and only drink of the golden liquid. There is Father Henri Huijbers, whom I never met. But in 1977, my truck became mired in a bog a few miles off the road near Burwash Landing, and a couple of young fellows who were working for him offered to help me out. They used his truck and got stuck too, so I hitchhiked to Destruction Bay and Mike Williams came to pull me out with his tow truck. I later sent Father Huijbers a donation for any inconvenience it caused him. There is Iris Warner, a treasure trove of Yukon history, who never failed to share that knowledge — and her enthusiasm. I spoke to Valerie Gra-

ham a couple of days ago about her involvement with YHMA. Her eyes lit up when she thought back to the many field trips and gatherings that were held in various Yukon communities. She remembered a camping weekend at Champagne — very unstructured event, but memorable. A weekend field trip to Elsa and Keno City in 1980 may have been the high point in the era of such outings, and one that my wife Kathy and I, like Valerie, remember with fondness. YHMA had its first conference in October of 1978, and brought together 150 people to hear historians Roy Minter and Al Wright, anthropologist Julie Cruikshank, and executive director of Heritage Canada, R.A.J. Phillips. I recall the projectionist fainted at one session and shared with the audience the fact that she was pregnant — before she had told her husband! Those who had travelled to Whitehorse from Dawson to attend, like me, had to drive back to the Klondike in a blinding snowstorm, arriving home at 2 a.m. I was not at the founding meeting of YHMA, but was quickly signed up as a member of the society. Not long after that, I was enlisted as one of the directors, which prompted numerous trips to Whitehorse to attend board meetings. When I suggested that they hold a meeting in Dawson City, the other board members protested that it was too far to drive. The fact that I had to make the trip regularly to attend the meetings seemed to be lost to them. At a spring meeting of 1979, I proposed that the conference be held in Dawson City on the Labour Day weekend. “That is so far to go,” griped one of the people at the meeting, but I persevered, and it was agreed. As it turned out, plenty of people from Whitehorse attended. On May 3, Dawson was inundated by a dreadful flood, and was still recovering at the beginning of September, but we pulled it off. The featured event, the very first screening of a selection of silent movies dug out of permafrost the year before, filled the Palace Grand Theatre and even appeared on the B.C. evening news. The house I lived in had floated off its foundation during the flood, and I had just moved back in four months later when

Kathy Jones-Gates/Yukon News

Top: The first meeting for what became the Yukon Historical and Museums Association (YHMA) took place March 12, 1977 at the MacBride Museum. Bottom: Members of the Yukon Museums and Historical Association attended a tribute to the organization in the territorial legislature on Nov. 21. the conference took place. The plumbing worked, but the furnace didn’t. Nevertheless, I invited many of the attendees from Whitehorse to crash there. Everybody brought foamies and sleeping bags, and we formed a spontaneous kazoo band and played songs till the late hours. Nobody complained, and I don’t remember anybody being too cold either. These were some of the many personal memories that have made my

affiliation with YHMA enjoyable. Of course, there was the organizing of the conferences, workshops, publications and the advocacy role. One milestone was the restoration of Donnenworth House,in Lepage Park, which has long served as the headquarters for the association. In more recent years, the YHMA was involved in organizing an annual conference of the Canadian Museums Association here in Whitehorse. There

Yukon Government is seeking expressions of interest from Yukon residents to serve on the Inuvialuit Arbitration Board. The Arbitration Board was established under Section 18 of the Inuvialuit Final Agreement to provide a mechanism to arbitrate disputes between the Inuvialuit and the governments of Canada, the Northwest Territories, and Yukon, as well as between the Inuvialuit and industry. This position is for a three-year term beginning in October 2018.

was the World War I conference in 2016, and the Joe Boyle birthday party that we celebrated just a few weeks ago that attest to the durability and continuing purpose of the organization. On November 21, 15 YHMA members attended a tribute at the Yu-

Michael Gates is a Yukon historian and sometimes adventurer based in Whitehorse. His new book, From the Klondike to Berlin, is now available in stores everywhere. You can contact him at msgates@northwestel.net

THE FEED STORE’S ANNUAL YUKON ANIMAL SHELTER FUNDRAISER

Funds to the Rescue!

Make a donation of cash, treats, food or toys and The Feed Store will match it! Last year, together, we raised about $14,000.

Eligibility requirements include experience in the field of law and/or alternative dispute resolution processes. Knowledge of the Inuvialuit Final Agreement and Inuvialuit Settlement Region are an asset.

For information and application forms, please contact 867-667-8553 or Stephanie.Muckenheim@gov.yk.ca.

kon Legislature. Among those in attendance were presidents of the society, past and present, board members, past and present, two executive directors (past and present) and four who have been members since the organization was founded 40 years ago. Yukon’s Tourism and Culture Minister Jeanie Dendys rose to acknowledge YHMA’s mission to inspire and share a passion for Yukon heritage, and its work to provide support for education, networking, advocacy, partnerships and preservation of our past. MLA Geraldine Van Bibber also rose to acknowledge YHMA’s prolific track record, including walking tours, flea markets, and the Yukon/ Stikline regional heritage fairs. “A small group realized that there was a need to capture, preserve and find our local history,” she said, “so that future generations would know what happened within our territory…. I would like to congratulate … the Yukon Historic and Museums Association on 40 years of promoting heritage and history in Yukon. I believe our history is in good hands.” Let’s hope that the next 40 years will be as productive and memorable as the last 40 were.

SELF SERVE PET WASH

*Please make all cheques payable to The Feed Store.

For more information, visit: www.env.gov.yk.ca 9006 QUARTZ ROAD, WHITEHORSE • 633-4076 • Monday-Friday 9-6; Saturday 9-5


32

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YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

SPORTS AND RECREATION Tyke hockey program embraces half-ice setup

Tom Patrick/Yukon News file

Whitehorse tyke and novice teams now practice and play exclusively on half a traditional hockey rink. John Hopkins-Hill News Reporter

F

or the youngster looking to start his or her hockey career, things are a little bit different than they used to be. Gone are the days of four, five and six-year-olds skating slowly up and down the full length of ice, hoping and praying to touch the puck. Thanks to changes that have trickled down from Hockey Canada and BC Hockey, tyke and novice teams now practice and play exclusively on half a traditional hockey rink. The Whitehorse Minor Hockey Association (WMHA) was an early adopter of the new format, implementing the changes a full year before its governing body, BC Hockey, made it mandatory. Desiree Martsinkiw, who oversees the tyke division, said although it was a big change for some players and parents to switch from fullice to half-ice, reception to the change has improved. “At first, for the ones that did play full-ice for so long, it was a big change, but once they got the idea behind it and people saw the structure, they were OK with it,” said Martsinkiw. “They realized it does

work and that we can have four teams on the ice instead of just two.” The decision to change tyke — also called initiation — and novice programs to cross-ice allows for players to be more engaged, according to statistics published by BC Hockey. In a half-ice situation, players take six times as many shots, receive five times as many passes and touch the puck twice as often. Keegan Goodrich, manager of communications for BC Hockey, said the change brings hockey more in line with other sports. “A five-year-old playing baseball doesn’t start playing in a major league baseball stadium with a pitcher throwing from 60 feet,” said Goodrich in an email. “They start in a smaller field playing t-ball. Hockey should be no different with size-appropriate playing surfaces.” The tyke program in Whitehorse has grown substantially, with registrations ballooning from as low as 38 just a few years ago to close to 70 this season. More teams mean more ice time is required for the division, and half-ice programs allow four teams to train at once instead of the usual two.

Tom Patrick/Yukon News file

Penguins’ Kennedy O’Brien celebrates a goal during the tykes final at the Whitehorse Minor Hockey Championships on Sunday at the Canada Games Centre in 2015. The Penguins beat the Wild 13-6 for gold. Justin Halowaty, president of WMHA, said that while there is still some grumbling about the changes, ultimately the goal is to help players improve and learn to love the game. Once players get to the atom division, they gener-

ally have the skating and puck skills required to play a full-ice game with all the traditional rules. BC Hockey released a 25-page transitional plan designed to help coaches and associations assist players make the jump from half-

ice to full-ice, introducing elements like offsides and icings. Ultimately, Martsinkiw said the changes have been positive for those that matter most — the players. “My son played on fullice,” said Martsinkiw. “A full-

ice game for him at that age, he was five, was hard. Not every kid will get to touch the puck if they don’t know how to skate.” “If they’re on half-ice, they get to touch the puck.” Contact John Hopkins-Hill at john.hopkinshill@yukon-news.com


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

yukon-news.com

33

Yukon Men’s Basketball League expands in fourth season John Hopkins-Hill News Reporter

T

he Yukon Men’s Basketball League is back for a fourth season and the league continues to grow. Colin LaForme, president of the Yukon Men’s Basketball Association, said the idea for a league in Whitehorse stemmed from a group who routinely played pickup basketball together and felt there was more interest in an organized league. “There was always talk of, ‘this guy would play, that guy would play, this guy used to play,’” said LaForme. All the talk led to the decision to host a tournament, mainly as a way to gauge interest in the idea. The tournament was a success, with teams from Whitehorse and squads from Dawson and Old Crow. “That was the kickoff to our league,” said LaForme. “We were able to say there are enough guys.” The first season, the league was made up of four teams and approximately 60 players. The league has since grown to eight teams with a 30-game season and playoffs. Although the regular season started in October, LaForme said the league is always ready to accept new players. “Our skill range is brand-new to the sport all the way to some expro players,” said LaForme. The “rec-competitive” league focuses on fun and exercise, but quality

John Hopkins-Hill/Yukon News

Above: The Thunder Gods move the basketball during a Yukon Men’s Basketball League game between the Royals and the Thunder Gods at Porter Creek Secondary School on Nov. 28. Right Nicholas Brayant goes up for a layup against Jason Kelly. tends to increase as the playoffs approach. “We have an opportunity so guys can learn the game, learn how to play in a fun environment,” said LaForme. “But it still is a men’s league and come playoff time, the intensity does pick up.” Focusing on fun, exercise and competition makes the league the perfect balance for most players. “It’s a great mix of a league because you get a nice long season to get out and to get your exercise in, because that’s what most of us want,” said LaForme. “You get out, get some exercise, have some fun, go for some pints, that sort of thing. Then come playoff time, guys get a little more intense and the skill level increases.” “We’ve all got to go to work the next day, so it’s

Retail Sales

all about getting out, getting some exercise and having some fun playing some basketball.” Although currently scheduled to run through March, LaForme said based on feedback from last year and the prevalence of vacations

in March it is likely this season will be adjusted to end slightly earlier. The fourth annual Lights Out Yukon Invitational tournament, sponsored for the second time by Kilrich Building Centres, is scheduled for Jan. 18 to 21 and regis-

tration is open until Dec. 8. Last year’s edition of the tournament included 12 teams, both men’s and women’s divisions and teams from across the North.

“The initial tournament was just to see if we could get a league going,” said LaForme. “This year we’re trying to grow and expand it again.” Contact John Hopkins-Hill at john.hopkinshill@yukon-news.com.

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FOODSAFE Level 1: $70.00 December 17, January 22, Jan 31-Feb 1 (evenings)

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Long-term foster families needed now for young children. We are looking for families who can provide a stable, supportive and structured environment over the long term. For more information, please call our toll-free foster care number at 1-833-896-2273. hss.gov.yk.ca/foster_care


34

yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

PUZZLE PAGE

Friday, December 1, 2017

Horoscope

Sudoku

Jan 21/Feb 18

Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk.

AQUARIUS

Aquarius, living in your imagination helps you drum up creative ideas, but this week you have to periodically reconnect with reality. Shift the focus to work or family.

Feb 19/Mar 20 The road to satisfaction can’t be found on a GPS device, Pisces. You have to do some soulsearching and figure out what you want.

PISCES Mar 21/Apr 20

ARIES

Aries, an outburst of creativity may surprise those close to you, but this week you just may need an outlet. Channel this energy into a project you have been hoping to complete.

Apr 21/May 21

FRIDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

TAURUS

Your poker face is on this week, Taurus. Keep things close to the vest as you have a surprise to announce and don’t want to spill the beans prematurely.

May 22/Jun 21

GEMINI

You can’t seem to sit still this week, Gemini. Get outdoors and take a hike or engage in another form of physical activity. Enjoy getting outside for some fun and fresh air.

Jun 22/Jul 22

CANCER

Cancer, a drastic shift in direction at work can catch you off guard at first, especially since you’ve been comfortable. But this challenge can provide greater opportunities.

Jul 23/Aug 23

LEO

Impatience will not serve you well this week, Leo. There is no room for shortcuts, so buckle down and devote yourself to the tasks at hand, even if they take a while.

Aug 24/Sept 22

VIRGO

A partnership might hit a rough patch this week, Virgo. But it isn’t anything serious. Commit to working things out and you will have benefitted from this experience.

Sept 23/Oct 23

CLUES ACROSS 1. Storage device 4. Disagree with 10. Political organization 11. Playoff appearances 12. Collection of cops 14. Balkan mountain peak 15. Island north of Guam 16. Seizure of someone’s property 18. Repeat 22. Beautiful youth 23. Bullfighters 24. Charges a fare

26. Not off 27. Where skaters ply their trade 28. Meson 30. Guru 31. Cycles/second 34. Alternating turns 36. Soviet Socialist Republic 37. Mound 39. Boxer Amir 40. Away from wind 41. Exist 42. Working man

48. British soldier 50. Scrounge 51. Upset 52. The act of escaping 53. Poet Pound 54. Confederate general 55. Midway between south and east 56. Becomes hot from the sun 58. Fictitious poet Mailey 59. Not yet purchased 60. Intersperse

17. Pestilence 19. Songs 20. Grilling tools 21. Long, winding ridge of sand and gravel 25. Court game 29. __kosh, near Lake Winnebago 31. Variety of beet 32. Caps 33. Rides in the snow 35. Took without permission 38. Tall stand to hold books

41. Spanish neighborhood 43. Spanish dance 44. Countries of Asia 45. Make fun of 46. Elk Grove High School 47. Network of nerves 49. Greek apertifs 56. Unit of volume 57. South Dakota

LIBRA

Oct 24/Nov 22

SCORPIO

Scorpio, controlled chaos is the source of your inspiration this week. Ruffle a few feathers, but make sure you do so in a productive and effective way.

Nov 23/Dec 21

CLUES DOWN 1. Bathing suit 2. Poignantly different from what was expected 3. A person with the same name as another 4. West Siberian river 5. Of the membrane lining the abdominal cavity 6. Has a positive electric charge 7. Fish-eating mammal of the weasel family 8. Offerers 9. Spanish be 12. Chilean province Capitan __ 13. Father

Libra, an unexpected turn of events spices things up in the coming days. Enjoy this change of pace but do your best to stay grounded throughout the tumult.

SAGITTARIUS

Sagittarius, the solution to a problem you have had for awhile will come to you this week. This immediately makes you more comfy allows you to focus on recreation.

Dec 22/Jan 20

CAPRICORN

Assignments at work take precedence this week, Capricorn. Do your best to navigate your way through a lengthy to-do list. Don’t let distractions get in your way.

THE ANSWERS CAN BE FOUND IN THE CLASSIFIEDS.


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

yukon-news.com

35

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www.yukon-news.com • 211 Wood Street, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 2E4 • Phone: (867) 667-6285 • Fax: (867) 668-3755 Rentals

Rentals

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent

Cottages / Cabins

Duplex / 4 Plex

2-bdrm apartment in Riverdale, N/P, utils incl’d, available immediately, responsible tenants, $1,600/mon. 6685558

Small cabin, power, phone, no running water, outhouse, 25 mins from town, available February 1, $650/mon. 633-2218

Real Estate

CUSTOM BUILD - PORTER CREEK

InSite

ID# 143847

550,000 32 Beech Street Whitehorse 867-322-1230

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Pre-Sale or Purchase visual inspections of structure and systems

2-bdrm duplex, Hillcrest, avail Dec. 1, oil/wood heat, w/d, no parties, responsible tenants, $1,050/mon + utils. 668-5558

Serving Yukon, NWT & Alaska

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Real Estate 22 placer claims, equivalent to 30, Victoria Creek, Mount Nanson, new 10-yr water license, some equipment included, $250,000 obo, serious inquiries only. 633-2218 for more info

Misc for Rent

Merchandise for Sale

Small, self-contained bachelor apartment, downtown, heat, lights & basic cable include, N/P, no parties, available immediately, $825/mon. 668-5558

Homes for Rent

Office/Retail

Mobile & Modular Homes

Rooms for Rent Large room, Marsh Lake, Judas Creek, N/S, N/P, clean, responsible tenant, $700/mon. 660-4073

HOUSESITTER available yearround - Professional, non-smoking, non-partying, mature female, offering unequalled care for pets, plants, yards, and house. References. Call Tracy 334-2882

Call Kevin Neufeld, Inspector at

INSITEHOMEINSPECTIONS.CA

Employment

Claims

2-bdrm home, Porter Creek, new, N/S, N/P, $2,000/mon + utils. 6336611

KevinNeufeld@hotmail.com

Employment

Housesitting

Good information Commercial ensures a smooth Maintenance transaction. Inventory Inspections

867-667-7674 • 867-334-8106

Rentals

3,600 sq ft shop for rent near Carcross cutoff, available immediately, first & last month’s rent required, $3,000/mon. 333-0336 Office/retail space on Ogilvie Street, includes S&W, bldg fire insurance, taxes, garbage collection, Toyo stove available. Small coffee/sink area. 667-7144

Appliances Inglis heavy duty, large capacity washer & dryer, good working condition, $350 for pair or $175 each separately. 333-0439 Upright freezer, 2’6”x2’.6”x4’6”, $150. 334-7218

Firearms 30-06 Winchester Model 70 w/walnut stock. post 64, Redfield 3-9-40 scope, in excellent cond, PAL req’d. $800 obo. 335-0277. Blackhawk Serpa holster, left hand for model 1911, full size, $25. 6686066 LICENSED TO BUY, SELL & CONSIGN rifles & ammo at G&R NEW & USED 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY * SELL

Storefront, downtown, high traffic corner, 1,600 sq ft, bay windows, infloor heating, lots of parking, security system, heat, garbage, water incl, $2,000/mon. 867-399-3671

Pre 64 Win, model 94, vg cond, $500; Browning BLR, 358 Win, Leupold 2x7 scope, dies, brass & factory ammo, $650. 667-2607

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

8443843 Teslin Tlingit Council Trust Request for Proposals to Contract

667-7681 or cell 334-4994 23 Lorne Rd. in McCrae

Office/Retail

clivemdrummond@gmail.com

Office/Retail

PRIME OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Ideal for « Tourism Business | Professional | Medical FOR LEASE: Two Suites available. Suites can be leased separately or combined as one. 1 suite is 1,248 sq. ft. • 2 suite is 1,380 sq. ft. (2,628 sq. ft. combined) ST

ND

Administrative Services The Teslin Tlingit Council Trust (TTCT), Investment Committee, and the Chilkahit Holdings Limited Partnership (CHLP) are seeking administrative services to coordinate meetings and do follow-up. In this role, you will work for two separate entities (TTC Trust and CHLP). Responsibilities may include but may not be limited to: • Coordinate meetings for TTCT, Investment Committee and CHLP • Take meeting minutes for all meetings • Track action items of all meetings • Follow up on action items where requested • Develop documents when requested • Assist in coordinating annual general meeting Meetings are often held in the evening but on occasion are during the day. Must have own transportation, ofÀce space, laptop and cell.

Education & Experience Grade 12 supplemented with a CertiÀcate in Administrative Services or a related discipline or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Knowledge practices and experience using Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook.

Located in the KLONDYKE BUILDING, downtown Whitehorse MOVE-IN Close to Main Street and the Yukon Tourism Centre. READY.

Requests are to be submitted by 4:00 PM on December 21, 2017 To Bob Magill, Box 133, Teslin, YT, Y0A 1B0.

For more information, please contact: 336-0028

To obtain more information, contact Bob Magill at 867-334-2950 or fax:867-390-2204 or email bob.magill@ttc-teslin.com.

8446587 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

Kwanlin Dün Judicial Council is looking to hire a part-time

JUDICIAL COUNCIL ADMINISTRATOR For more information: kdfnjudicialcouncil@gmail.com

Employment Employment Opportunities Opportunities Yukon College is a small and innovative institution with 13 campuses, 11 of which are located in smaller rural Yukon communities. As the only post-secondary institution in Yukon, we prepare our students to succeed in the North. Grounded in northern expertise and strong partnerships, we are poised to be a leader in Indigenous self-determination, climate change DQG UHVRXUFH GHYHORSPHQW 6RRQ WR EH WKH ÀUVW &DQDGLDQ university North of 60 – Yukon University. Come join us as we blaze trails and build a healthy and prosperous north through unique, relevant and inclusive education and research.

Director, Cold Climate Innovation Ayamdigut (Whitehorse) Campus January 2018 to September 30, 2018 Salary: $57.29 to 71.62 per hour Based on 75.0 hours bi-weekly Competition No.: 17.155 Initial Review Date: December 21, 2017

Community Adult Education Coordinator (CAEC) Carmacks Community Campus January 2, 2018 to June 30, 2018 Salary: $38.89 to $47.49 per hour Based on 75.0 hours bi-weekly Competition No.: 17.161 Initial Review Date: December 11, 2017 Go to: http://yukoncollege.yk.ca/about/ employment for more information on all job competitions.

Quoting the competition number, please submit your resume and cover letter to: Yukon College, Human Resources Services, Box 2799, 500 College Drive, Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 5K4 Fax: 867-668-8896 Email: hr@yukoncollege.yk.ca


36

yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

Merchandise for Sale

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Merchandise for Sale

Firearms

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Misc. for Sale

Rhineland Arms R22, elite target/tactical semi-auto .22 lr, minty fresh, PAL req’d, $700. 332-2680 Ruger 10-22, synthetic stock, red dot & laser sights, extra mag, only 2 boxes shot through it, $400. 6672607 Wanted: Remington Model 700 in .25-06 calibre. If you have one to sell or trade call 633-2443 Whitehorse Rifle & Pistol Club nonrestricted firearms safety course December 9 & 10. For more info: 6332488

Firewood/Fuel Winchester Commemorative Lever Action Collection for sale. 867-3344608 EVF FUELWOOD ENT Year Round Delivery * Dry accurate cords *1/2 Cord Orders Accepted *Clean shavings available *VISA/MC accepted Member of Yukon Wood Producers Assoc Costs will rise ORDER NOW 456-7432

Chief Executive Of½cer and President

www.littlefootprintsbigsteps.com

Help Wanted

Child Welfare Analyst (2 positions)

The Chief Executive Of½cer and President for the Kluane Dana ShäĀw Limited Partnership will ful½ll the mandate of creating wealth through investments. The Chief Executive Of½cer and President will maximize ½nancial growth and returns in a manner that respects the culture and tradition of KFN.

Job Summary: Ƭ Ǥ ǡ ϐ ǡ ǡ Ǥ

Reporting to the Kluane Dana ShäĀw Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Of½cer and President has the overall responsibility for:

Screening Criteria: Ǧ ǡ ϐ Ȁ Ǥ

• Leading, directing and managing the day to day operations and administration of KDSLP; • Financial management, strategic planning, and implementation; • Supervising KDSLP’s businesses and projects; • Seeking and managing the funding and implementation for new business opportunities; • Ensuring positive and productive public relations with the community, KFN, partners and stakeholders; Kluane Dana ShäĀw Corporation is the independent, for-pro½t, business investment vehicle for the shareholders of the Kluane First Nation.

Little Footprints, Big Steps was founded to provide ongoing care and protection for the children of Haiti. We welcome and greatly appreciate your support. Please check our website to donate, fundraise or to get involved.

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Quali½ed applicants will need to submit a resume on or before the Closing Date: January 12, 2018 For a complete job description, please contact: Willow Lacosse, ¼nancemanager@kluanecorp.ca 867.668.2333 ext.0

Salary: ̈́͸͹ǡͲͶͶǤ͹ͳ ̈́ͺ͵ǡͺͲ͹ǤͳͶ Hours: Ǧ ͵Ͳǡ ʹͲͳͺ A secondment may also be considered to ϐill this position

Health & Social Analyst Job Summary: Ƭ ǡ Ƭ Ǥ ǡ ϐ ǡ ǡ Ǥ Screening Criteria: Ǧ ǡ ϐ Ȁ Ǥ Salary: ̈́͸ͲǡͲ͸ͲǤ͵͸ Ǧ ̈́͹ͷǡͲ͹͸ǤͲͺ Hours: Ǧ A secondment may also be considered to ϐill this position Additional Information December 12, 2017 at 11:59 p.m. Ǥ ϐ Ǥ Please submit resumes to: Ȃ ǣ Ǥ ̷ Ǥ ǣ ȋͺ͸͹Ȍ ͵ͻ͵ǦͻʹͲͲ Ǥ ͻʹ͵͹ ǣ ȋͺ͸͹Ȍ ͸͸ͺǦ͸ͷ͹͹

Power Generation Technician Whitehorse, Yukon

ATCO Structures & Logistics is a North American leader in technical services and facilities management for the telecommunications, resource, transportation, utility and defense sectors. Our Joint Venture with the Northern Aboriginal Services Company has an immediate requirement for a Power Generation Technician, to maintain diesel power generation systems at telecom sites in Yukon & northern BC. The Power Generation Technician will provide scheduled preventive maintenance on diesel generators at remote sites, unscheduled repairs and emergency response to correct diesel generator failures and other related problems, and periodic installations of generators and related equipment. Inspections of fuel systems, fuel tank dips and reporting as well as associated fuel supply problems that may arise.

YUKON FIRST NATIONS PREFERENTIAL HIRING POLICY IS APPLICABLE AND MUST BE CLEARLY IDENTIFIED ON APPLICATION.

Merchandise for Sale

Furniture

Firewood/Fuel

Sloan chair, beige with large ottoman, $45 ea. 660-4321 Wanted: Sturdy double bed for large, disabled man. Dwayne @ 334-8150

• •

• • •

Fox Lake Fire-Killed Wood for sale $190/cord for 8 cords delivered tree length $250/cord for 2.5 cords delivered at 16” length Or You Come and Get It from our yard in Whitehorse $185/cord cut your own from the pile $190/cord you pick up 8’ lengths $220/cord you pick up 16” stove lengths 333-5174 or 633-3493

HURLBURT ENTERPRISES INC.

The position requires regular travel by truck and helicopter to remote sites in northern BC, and Yukon. The successful candidate will be a diesel or heavy equipment mechanic (Journeyman/Apprentice or Equivalent experience) with a valid driver’s license. Candidates should have a minimum of 5 years’ experience maintaining and repairing diesel generators; trouble shooting and repairing mechanical and electronic engine controllers; and repairing other equipment associated with remote diesel power generation. A demonstrated ability to work independently and “get the job done” thoroughly, ef¿ciently and safely is essential. ATCO Structures offers a competitive pay and bene¿ts package. Quali¿ed individuals are invited to apply on or before December 22nd to: Administration Coordinator, ATCO Structures & Logistics. #210-1100 Front Street, Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 6K6 Fax: (867) 667-4820 | or e-mail alberta.weber@atcosl.com

Store (867) 633-3276 Dev (867) 335-5192 Carl (867) 334-3782

Beetle-killed spruce from Haines Junction, quality guaranteed Everything over 8" split Prices as low as $250/cord Single and emergency half cord deliveries Scheduled delivery

®

MasterCard

®

Cheque, Cash S.A. vouchers accepted.

Furniture Beige love seat, $300. 393-2113 Queen size mattress and box spring, clean and slightly lumpy, $30. 633-6603

Houseplants, Dracaena Tree, Palm Tree, Umbrella Tree, large Spider plant, long ivy, Kalanchoe, Begonia, $5 to $35. 660-4321 Husqvarna 357 chainsaw, $357. 633-6603 Insulated snow pants, custom made by Sporties, zippered legs with reflective tape, $125. Ice Field winter boots, like new, good to 50 below, sz 10, $100. 633-3117 iPhone 5S 32 GB Bell/Virgin, good cond, c/w charge cord, $160. 3346087 KLONDIKE UPHOLSTERY We recover: * Snowmobiles * Boats * RVs * Restaurant seats * Heavy equipment seats We also sell DYI supplies, foam cushions and mattresses. Call or text 867-335-2301 Longvie propane heater, good for cabin; women’s bomber jacket, leather, black, sz medium. 334-0572 On November 15 someone picked up my friend who hitchhiked from Yukon River Bridge to Jake’s Corner. He left his Leatherman in the vehicle. Did you find it? 333-7044 RON’S SMALL ENGINE SERVICES Repairs to Snowmobiles, Chainsaws, Lawnmowers, ATV’s, Small industrial equipment. Light automotive & welding repairs available 867-332-2333 lv msg Small round dining room table, folddown 2 sides, c/w 2 chairs, $175 obo; dark green metal unit, 3 shelves & bottle display, $90 obo, N/S home. 689-5907 “Tractor printer” perforated paper, full box, FREE. 334-1875 Unimount aluminum rim that fits on a 1100x24.5 tire, good shape, $150. 668-5906 or 668-1281 Women’s 3/4 length, navy blue winter coat, new, size 3x, down fill, $80 obo. 393-2780

Misc. Wanted Wanted: Apartment-size freezer. 667-4526, lv msg. Wanted: Delivery of three boxes to Edmonton in exchange for gas money. 334-1875 Wanted: used sheet metal roofing for large shed. 334-6087

Musical Instruments 7-piece Pearl drum set, good condition, barely used, $6000 obo. 6677455

Misc. for Sale

Sporting Goods

3” electric water pump, $1,500; new 3-yd tooth bucket, loader; standing custom wood coat rack, nice, $150; Norge NSF wood stove, $200; 2.5hp Briggs & Stratton, running, $250. 667-4821 3 large Native moose skin drums, $250 ea; Grizzly bear rug, full head mount w/claws, silver tip hair, for floor or wall, $2,000. 867-689-6197 40 square feet sheets of stained glass, various colours & sizes, $400 for all. 633-3117 Birdcage, 18.5”Wx41.5”Hx18.5”L, $45; Aquarium 12.5”Wx18”Hx30”L, $45; also kennels. 660-4321 Books on DVD, straight trade, 1 for 1, call to check titles. No kid stuff or x-rated. 667-2607 Burnham oil-fired boiler, great condition for home or shop. 867-399-3063

Senior goalie gear, pads 35+1 Brian’s G-Netik Pro, $800 obo. Goalie gloves, Brian’s trappers Vaughn blocker, $350 obo. 668-4186

Canvas Tents & Wood Stoves Lowest Prices in Canada Tents will ship by Greyhound from Castlegar, BC Canvas Tent Shop www.canvastentshop.ca 1-800-234-1150 Call for Prices Coleman Genset, 5,000 watts, 120240, new, $500; hydraulic tank, $100; steel fuel tanks, all sizes; masonry saw, $50; 30kw gen set; Cummins engine for parts. 667-4821 Couch, beige/brocade pattern, $150 obo; tall bookshelves, tan colour, $75 ea; clean, non-smoking home. 689-5907 Eddie Bauer ladies black Superior down parka, fur on hood, never worn, sz large, fits 12-24, $300; Ladies Calgary Flames jersey, sz XL, fits sz 12, $75. 668-7383 lv msg

Stereo / DVD / TV 25” Samsung flat screen TV, $100. 668-7383

Transportation Auto Accessories/Parts 2005 F-150 1/2 ton motor, tranny & diff; 2005 F-150 17” factory aluminum rim & tire; 4 Cavalier rims & tires, 15”; 300 Ford 6-cyl EFI & C4 auto. 667-4821 Nokian studded snow tires, hardly used, size 2015 65R 15, $400 for set. 668-1040 TRUCK CANOPIES in stock *New Dodge long/short box *New GM long/short box *New Ford long/short box Hi-Rise & Cab Hi several in stock View at centennialmotors.com 393-8100

Cars - Domestic 2002 Ford Focus station wagon, power everything, equipped for winter, many new components, ready to go, $3,600 obo. 456-7030 2002 Honda CRV, AWD, leather, heated seats, block heater, equipped for winter, asking $6,300 obo. 456-7030


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

Employment

Employment

Transportation

Services

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Utility Trailers

Carpentry/ Woodwork

TAIT’S TRAILERS www.taittrailers.com taits@northwestel.net Quality new and used Horse * Cargo * Equipment trailers for sale or rent Call Anytime 334-2194 Southern prices delivered to the Yukon

Office Administrator The Carcross Tagish Renewable Resources Council (CTRRC) was established under the Carcross Tagish First Nation (CTFN) Final Agreement as a “primary instrument for local renewable resources management” in the traditional territory. Our office is located in Tagish, Yukon and we need a person who is great at multitasking to run our office, 18 to 20 hours a week (flexible hours) Must have: • Organizational skills - co-ordinate meetings, travel, catering • Office skills- correspondence, filing, annual reports, minute taking • Computer skills- Office, outlook, internet research • Communication skills, oral and writing • Ability to work independently and as part of the team Would prefer: • A renewable resource background • Knowledge of the Carcross Tagish First Nation Final Agreement Chapter 16 • Knowledge of the Carcross Tagish First Nation Traditional Territory. Contact: Carcross Tagish Renewable Resources Council by Email: carcrosstagishrrc@gmail.com Resumes must be received by December 10, 2017.

2016 Hyundai ai ort Santa FE Sport

DRYWALL • WEATHERSTRIPPING CARPENTRY • BATHROOMS CARP Affordable, Prompt Service Affor Aff rvice i SPECIALIZING IN SMALL JOBS MARILYN ASTON 867 . 333 . 5786

AWD, Red, winter studded tires

$

30,999

2014 Ram 3500 SLT

Home Repairs

6.7L Cummins diesel, grey, Crew cab, 4x4

$

HANDYMAN SERVICES 24-7 *Renovations * Repairs

39,995

*Restorations * Maintenance

2015 Ram 2500 00 Laramie $

*Furniture Repair *Small Appliance Repair *Interior/Exterior Painting *Gutter Cleaning *Pressure Washing *Window Washing

6300km

6.7L Cummins diesel, black, ack, Crew cab, 4x4, Bed coverr

49,900

USED VEHICLE CLEARANCE! $ 2007 Toyota Seqoia 4-DOOR LIMITED BLACK 2014 Ram 1500 Crew 4X4 SLT, WHITE 2014 GMC Acadia SLE2 BLACK 2017 Chev Cruze PREMIER TURBO, GREY 1999 Buick Century 4-DOOR 2016 Chrysler 200 LX 4-DOOR, BLACK 2500KM 2011 Kia Sorento LX AWD WHITE 2010 Ford Mustang GT CONVERTIBLE, 5.0L 2004 Chrysler Intrepid BLACK 2005 Ford Explorer Sport Trac Leaded 2001 Chev 3500 15 PASS WGN, WHITE, LOW KMS

..........................

..........................................

........................................................ ...............................................

393-2275

26,500 28,900 $ 27,900 $ 27,900 $ 695 $ 26,900 $ 14,900 $ 19,995 $ 2,995 $ 6,895 $ 6,900

$

Misc Services

.......................................................................................

BUSY BEAVERS Hauling, Pruning, Painting Snow Shoveling General Labour Call Francois and Katherine 456-4755

........................................................

.................................................................... ..................

.................................

Transportation

Transportation

Other Older Models going for between

$199.00 to $399.00!!!!!

LOG CABINS: Professional Scribe Fit log buildings at affordable rates. Contact: PF Watson, Box 40187 Whitehorse, YT Y1A 6M9 668-3632

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Cars - Domestic

Recreational/Sale

2004 Honda Civic Si, power everything, equipped for winter, very clean, good windshield, sunroof, $5,400. 456-7030

2013 26’ Everlight trailer, leather seats and chesterfield upholstery, lightweight, easy to haul, large fridge, stove, oven, TV, multiple storage areas, A/C, pics available, $27,000. 633-3113

2007 Chevy Equinox, AWD, fully loaded, 220,000 highway kms, $6,000 obo. 333-0260 2007 Dodge Caliber SXT wagon, 2 Li 14, 4-dr, 143,000kms, new winter tires & windshield, 5-spd manual, seats 5, well maintained, $6,755. 335-3439 2009 Dodge Journey SXT sport utility, 3.5L, V6, 173,000kms, 7-passenger fold-down seating TV, new windshield, sunroof, heated seats, tow package, Bluetooth, good winter tires, etc, $9,655. 335-3439 2009 Hyundai Elantra, 5-spd trans, reliable, clean, all season tires good shape, moving & need to sell, $3,600. 335-1088 2012 Chevrolet Cruze LT, automatic, only 56,000 kms, beautiful condition, ready to go, recently serviced, extra set of all season tires, $9,950. 333-9020 2012 Dodge Gran Caravan, 187,000Km, loaded, excellent condition, winterized, extra set of new winter tires, $10,500 obo. 322-2404 2013 Jeep Sahara, 4-dr, 119,000kms, 41K/2yr warranty, manual, remote, loaded, Smittybilt bumpers, winch, 5XBFG A/T 275/70 tires, 50” rigid lightbar, soft top, $229,000 obo. 335-9343 4 new studded winter tires with rims, Hercules Avalanche Extreme, 185/60 R15, fits Yaris and small cars, only 200kms on them, $700. 667-4681

Motorcycles 2010 2-passenger automatic scooter, 250cc, new cover, windshield, 400kms, new condition, $2,500. 333-9020

Off Road Vehicles Polaris 330, excellent condition, has winch & 4-wheel drive, only 400kms, must sell, $4,000. 334-8197

Snowmobiles 2006 Arctic Cat M-7 black w/orange decals, 162” trac, 2 and 1/2” paddles, upgraded exhaust, boss seat, also c/w originals, scratchers, tow hitch & cover, exc cond, must see. 335-0277 2006 Bombardier Skandic snowmobile, widetrack, 800 cc, new battery, great condition, runs great, $4,500. 334-3456 2011 RMK 600, 500 miles, 40hrs on sled, reverse, hand & thumb warmers, great cond, $5,900 obo. 3348892

Sport Utility Vehicle 2002 Nissan Xterra suv Super charged 3.3L engine, 4x4, standard, new timing belt, command start, extra tires on rims, service history, exc cond, $5,500. 333-9020 2008 Ford Escape AWD, 134,000kms, heated leather seats, command start, snow tires, always dealer serviced, $9,900. 633-4607 2008 Nissan Rogue SL, AWD, sunroof, heated seats, never smoked in, low kms at 77,000, exc cond, winter/summer tires, $11,000 obo. 6674540

Trucks & Vans 2007 F350 quad cab, short box, 4x4 Triton V10, 212,000 kms, fully loaded, clean, $16,500 obo. 633-2218 2007 Ford F-250 SD Super-Cab 4X4, brush grille, aux driving/backup lights, 5 spare rims & tires, rear axle airbags, camper tie-downs, 150,000kms, $16,500 obo. 6338430 2011 BMW X5 turbocharged Diesel AWD SUV, full options incl. command start, 360d camera, panoramic sunroof, navigation, dual dvd players, too much to list, $27,950. 333-9020

In-House Financing Available

For Quick Approval call: 668-5559

#4 Fraser Road, McCrae, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 5S8

EMAIL: woloshyn@northwestel.net

A

Rating

ACCREDITED BUSINESS

633-6019 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1

2017

HOURS OF OPERATION FOR THE SHELTER: Tues - Fri: 12:00pm-7:00pm Sat 10:00am-6:00pm CLOSED Sundays & Mondays

Help control the pet overpopulation problem have your pets SPAYED OR NEUTERED. FOR INFORMATION CALL

633-6019

Become A Monthly Donor... and be part of our “Proud Supporter” Group. Go to our website to donate today.

Wish List Items:

Surgical Vinyl Gloves, Medium and Large Dog toys!! Rubber Gloves, Medium and Large Large/medium kennels (plastic or metal) Hand sanitizer Bleach Dog Beds Cat Litter Dish Soap Heavy Duty and Extra Large Garbage Bags

Laundry Detergent Poop Bags Insulated Dog Houses Mop Heads Towels Stamps Paper towels White Rawhides Canadian Natural Adult Dog Food Summit Puppy Food

AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION

PIANO TUNING & REPAIR by certified piano technician Call Barry Kitchen @ 633-5191 Email: bfkitchen@hotmail.com

Small Ads Get

BIG

WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY

Results

House Hunters Your

Commu Advertise your nityHome

SPEEDY SPARKLE Professional Snow-Clearing Company Specializing in downtown sidewalks and home driveways Fully insured Call Francis 668-6481 or 334-8480

for only One$60+GST

Painting & Decorating

New per. weeks) in 3 issues (3 spa consecutive

PHONE:Clic 867-667-6283 k Away.

PASCAL REGINE PAINTING PASCAL AND REGINE Residential - Commercial Interior - Exterior Ceilings, Walls Textures, Floors Spray work Small drywall repair Excellent quality workmanship Free estimates

www.yukon-news.com

WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY

8445401

HOME REPAIRS & RENOVATIONS

Luxury Model

.............................

Wages $25-$32 per hour DOE

The Handy Woman

SALES • BODY SHOP • PARTS • SERVICE

...................

Only those who qualify for an interview will be contacted.

MC RENOVATION Construction & Renovations Laminated floor, siding, decks, tiles. Kitchen, bathroom, doors, cabinets, windows, framing, board, painting. Drop ceiling, fences No job too small Free estimates Michael 336-0468 yt.mcr@hotmail.com

Boats PROFESSIONAL BOAT REPAIR Fiberglass Supplies Marine Accessories FAR NORTH FIBERGLASS 49 MacDonald Rd Whitehorse, Yukon 393-2467

Chinook

Rocky

Sadie

Kiki

Orange Thunder

Tony

pascalreginepainting@northwestel.net

633-6368

Emmie

Ashika

Your home. Your life.

Your paper.

37

yukon-news.com

And more... Marilyn

Jade

Come for a visit and meet your next furry family member!

RUNNING AT LARGE... If you have lost a pet, remember to check with City Bylaw: 668-8382

Check out our website at:

WWW.HUMANESOCIETYYUKON.CA


38

yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

Pets

Announcements

Livestock

Coming Events

QUALITY YUKON MEAT No hormones, steroids or additives Grass raised grain finished. Hereford beef - $5.50/lb Domestic pork - $5/lb Domestic wild boar - $6/lb Order now for guaranteed spring or fall delivery. Whole, half or custom order. Samples available 668-7218 * 335-5192

3RD Annual Christmas Market at the Old Fire Hall Friday: December 1st, 11am-7pm, Saturday: December 2nd, 11am-5pm TWO DAYS ONLY! 28 local artisans & Atlin Mountain Coffee providing coffee service! Kids’ Shopping hour with wrapping table 3pm-4pm on Saturday! Find us on Facebook!

HORSE HAVEN HAY RANCH Irrigated Timothy/Brome mix No weeds or sticks Small squares 60 lbs plus 4 ft x 5 ft rounds 800 lbs Ask about free delivery for larger orders Straw and alfalfa bales available 335-5192 * 668-7218

Candlelight Concert. All welcome for an evening of modern Christmas music, hot cider and candlelight, December 10 at 5 and 7pm, Whitehorse Baptist Church. Chilkoot Trail/Log Cabin: Non-motorized weekends, December 8-10 & 29-31. Other weekends & weekdays: multi-use. For info 867-6673910 Coffee House Saturday December 2, featuring Tania Gosselin & the Open Stage. Help set up at 6pm, open stage sign-up, 7:30pm show, basement United Church, 6th & Main. 633-4255 Council of Yukon First Nations Holiday Open House, Thursday, December 14, 2017, 2:30pm to 4:30pm, at 2166-2nd Avenue, Whitehorse. Refreshments and appetizers will be served.

Wanted: Horse-drawn sleigh, must be able to hold at least 6 people, ideally around 10. Call 335-2257

Pet Services CANINES & COMPANY Offering classes: Puppy Essentials/Agility November 28 Puppy Fundamentals/Basic Obedience January 9 Private lessons Training daycare available Call 333-0505

Pets Miniature Dachshund puppies for sale, ready for their “forever” home, serious inquiries only. For more info text or call 867-335-0082 Wanted: Free cat & dog for out of town cabin life. 633-4826

Misc Services

Do you have a hard time at Christmas? Whitehorse United Church, corner of 6th and Main, is having a Blue Christmas Service on December 3, 7pm. This is a service of understanding and quiet hope. All are welcome. Drop in Mental Health Association, Yukon’s Holiday Open House. Mingle and enjoy some refreshments on Thursday, December 7th, 5-7pm upstairs, Horwood’s Mall #1. Horaire piste Chilkoot/Log Cabin: Multi-usage sauf du 8 au 10 et du 29 au 31 Decembre: activities non motorisees. 867-667-3910

Misc Services

13 DENVER ROAD in McCRAE • 668-6639

Custom-cut Stone Products

HEADSTONES • KITCHENS • BUILDING STONE • AND MORE...

sid@sidrock.com

Announcements Coming Events Elegant Canadian fur coats, beautiful condition, plus assorted winter wear at the Anglican Church Market, 4th & Elliott, on Saturday, December 2nd until 1pm. Elijah Smith School Council is holding it’s Regular Council Meeting on Tuesday, December 5, 2017, at 6:30pm in the School Library. Everyone is welcome to attend. Frostbite 2018 at Centre, evening, follow!

Returns March 2, 3 & 4, The Kwanlin Dun Cultural Friday evening, Saturday Sunday family day. More to

Golden Age Society: We have one 6’ table left for our Christmas Craft Sale on Saturday, December 2. Cost $25 to book. For more info call Deborah 668-5538 Hospice Yukon: Free, confidential services offering compassionate support to all those facing advanced illness, death and bereavement. Visit our lending library @ 409 Jarvis, M-F, 11:30-3. 667-7429, www.hospiceyukon.net Jack Hulland School Council is holding it’s Regular Council Meeting on Wednesday, December 6, 2017, at 7:00pm in the School Library. Everyone is welcome to attend. Many Rivers is hosting a 6-session healthy boundaries group from 11:30am-1pm at 4071 4th Ave starting January 16. Call Kim Rogers at 667-2970 to set up your intake meeting.

Friday, December 1, 2017

Garage Sales Indoor sale, 83-11 Avenue, Porter Creek, Saturday December 2, 9am-12Noon, shop vac, clothes, fireplace, curtains, toys etc

Announcements Coming Events Queer Yukon: upcoming social events for the LGBTQ + allies community. www.queeryukon.com. The Heart of Riverdale Annual General Meeting is on Thursday, December 28 at 7:30pm, 38A Lewes Blvd. Please do your best to attend; we will be discussing topics which will impact our future. Whitehorse General Hospital Women’s Auxiliary Monthly Meeting and Christmas Party Monday December 11, 7:30pm @ WGH. Guests Welcome! Info: 667-2087 YRTA (Yukon Retired Teachers) Breakfast Tuesday December 12th, 9:30 am at Ricky’s. Info: 667-2644 YRTA (Yukon Retired Teachers) Christmas Dinner Thursday, December 7, 5pm-9pm, Westmark Whitehorse. For info or to book: 668-6905 Yukon East Coast Cultural Association AGM is Tuesday, December 5, 6:30pm, at the Whitehorse Legion. Joint the Board or just vote. More info yukon.east@gmail.com

Music for a Winter’s Eve. Yukon Arts Centre December 11 & 12, 7pm both nights, featuring All-City Jazz Band, Vanier Junior Jazz Combo etc. Adults $12, students/seniors $10, children $7. Tickets @ Yukon Arts box office, Arts Underground, www.yukontickets.com

Yukon Federal Green Party AGM - Thursday, Dec. 7th, 7pm Lupine Room, Whitehorse Public Library. Appies by The Claim; Speaker: Adam Olsen, BC Greens by Skype. 660-5212 for more info.

One Starry Night, free, family event. Experience the Town of Bethlehem the night Jesus was born. Holy Family Elementary School, 4 showings, December 15-17. Email: onestarrynight@whbc.ca for more info

Yukon Territorial Green Party Annual General Meeting is Thursday, December 28 at 7pm, in the Library meeting room.

Share-the-Spirit Pancake Breakfast, Porter Creek Secondary School, Tuesday December 5, 7am-10:15am, pancakes, sausage, coffee/juice $5/plate, special appearance by Santa & his elves SILVERSMITHING COURSES offered by Motherlode Jewellery! $150 for pendant and earring sets, and up to $225 for pendant, earrings, bracelet sets or two rings. More info at: facebook/Motherlode Jewellery email: motherlodejewellery@gmail.com

Misc Services

Fast & Hassle-Free

Personals Whitehorse Duplicate Bridge Club November 28, 2017 1st - Lynn Daffe & Bruce Beaton 2nd - Mark Davey & Chris Bookless 3rd - Jan Ogilvy & Darwin Wreggitt We play every Tuesday at 7:00 pm at the Golden Age Society. New players are welcome. For more information call 633-5352 or email nmcgowan@klondiker.co

Lost & Found LOST: Our big, white dog, Bannock, went missing from the North Klondike Hwy, Km582 after Halloween. Last seen near Stewart Crossing on Fri, Nov 3. We miss him very much. 393-3217 juliana@northwestel.net

Anytime, anywhere.

WHERE DO I GET THE NEWS?

The Yukon News is available at these wonderful stores in Whitehorse:

HILLCREST

GRANGER

Airport Chalet Airport Snacks & Gifts

Bernie’s Race-Trac Gas Bigway Foods

PORTER CREEK

RIVERDALE: Coyote Video 38 Famous Video Goody’s Gas Green Garden Restaurant Super A Riverdale Tempo Gas Bar Super A Porter Creek Trails North DOWNTOWN: Canadian Tire Cashplan Coles (Chilkoot Mall) The Deli Edgewater Hotel Your Independent Grocer Fourth Avenue Petro Mac’s Fireweed Books Ricky’s Restaurant

AND … Kopper King McCrae Petro Takhini Gas Yukon College Bookstore

Riverside Grocery Riverview Hotel Shoppers on Main Shoppers Qwanlin Mall Superstore Superstore Gas Bar Tags Walmart Well-Read Books Westmark Whitehorse Yukon Inn Yukon News Yukon Tire

CHEQUE CASHING

No Holds... Instant CASH! THE YUKON NEWS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE IN ALL YUKON COMMUNITIES AND ATLIN, B.C.

WHITEHORSE MONEY MART 2190 Second Avenue 867-668-6930 Open 7 Days A Week

www.yukon-news.com

“YOUR COMMUNITY CONNECTION” WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY


Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

Puzzle Page 8445373 Answer Guide

Looking for NEW Business / Clients?

Sudoku:

Advertise in The Yukon News ClassiďŹ eds!

Take Advantage of our 6 month Deal... Advertise for 5 Months and

Get 1 MONTH OF FREE ADVERTISING

Crossword:

Book Your Ad Today! T: 667-6285 • F: 668-3755 E: wordads@yukon-news.com

Tenders

12.01.2017

Legal Legal Notices

Liquor Corporation

LIQUOR ACT T New Licence

Existing Licence T

TAKE NOTICE THAT, Aurora Inn Inc. of PO Box 1241, Dawson City, Yukon, Y0B 1G0, is making application for change(s) to Food Primary – All liquor licence(s), in respect of the premises known as Aurora Inn situated at 736 5th Ave. in Dawson City, Yukon. Any person who wishes to object to the granting of this application should ďŹ le their objection in writing (with reasons) to: President, Yukon Liquor Corporation 9031 Quartz Road Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 4P9 no later than 4:30pm on the 20th day of December, 2017 and also serve a copy of the objection by registered mail upon the applicant. The ďŹ rst time of publication of notice is December 1st, 2017. The second time of publication of notice is December 8th, 2017. The third time of publication of notice is December 15th, 2017. Any questions concerning this speciďŹ c notice are to be directed to Licensing & Inspections, Yukon Liquor Corporation 867-667-5245 or toll-free 1-800-661-0408, x 5245.

Legal

PUBLIC TENDER WINTER VEGETATION CONTROL KM 668.3 TO KM 670.2 AND KM 686.2 TO KM 690.4, KLONDIKE HIGHWAY YUKON, 2017-2018 Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is December 18, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Michael Zuccarini at michael. zuccarini@gov.yk.ca. All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. The Yukon Business Incentive Policy may apply to this project. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/

Highways and Public Works

Tenders

OBJECTIONS TO LIQUOR LICENCE RENEWALS Any person wishing to object to the renewal of any liquor licence may do so, in writing, not later than January 1, 201 . PLEASE FORWARD WRITTEN OBJECTIONS, WITH REASONS TO: THE PRESIDENT YUKON LIQUOR CORPORATION 9031 QUARTZ ROAD WHITEHORSE, YUKON Y1A 4P9 A copy of the written objection must also be served by the objector on the licensee, either in person or by registered mail. THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 35(3) OF THE YUKON LIQUOR ACT.

yukon-news.com

Legal

Legal

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND CLAIMANTS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF

ROBERT EMMETT MCGURK

Deceased of Whitehorse, Yukon Territory who died on October 28, 2016. All persons having claims against the above-mentioned Estate are requested to Àle a claim, supported by Statutory Declaration, with Anna C. StarksJacob, on or before December 15, 2017, after which date the Estate will be distributed having reference only to claims which have been so Àled. All persons indebted to the Estate are requested to make immediate payment to:

AUSTRING, FENDRICK & FAIRMAN

Liquor Corporation

LIQUOR ACT New Licence T

T Existing Licence

TAKE NOTICE THAT, Kluane Energy Limited Partnership of PO Box 61, Burwash, Yukon, Y0B 1V0, is making application for change(s) to Food Primary – All Liquor and OffPremises liquor licence(s), in respect of the premises known as Kluane Energy Cafe situated at Lot 1021, Alaska Hwy in Burwash Landing, Yukon. Any person who wishes to object to the granting of this application should ďŹ le their objection in writing (with reasons) to: President, Yukon Liquor Corporation 9031 Quartz Road Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 4P9 no later than 4:30pm on the 13th day of December, 2017 and also serve a copy of the objection by registered mail upon the applicant. The ďŹ rst time of publication of notice is November 24th, 2017. The second time of publication of notice is December 1st, 2017.

J a m t s i Chr AZAARS

SHOPPING B By the Book Craft Sale

Friday, December 1, 10am to 8pm AND Saturday, December 2, 10am-5pm. Join us at Well Read Books. Artists: Jeanine Baker, Larry Duguay, Mary Hudgin, Nancy Mercier & more.

3RD Annual Christmas Market Friday, December 1, 11am-7pm, & Saturday December 2, 11am-5pm at the Old Fire Hall. 2 DAYS ONLY! 28 local artisans & Atlin Mountain Coffee providing coffee service. Kid’s shopping hour with wrapping table 3pm-4pm on Saturday. Find us on Facebook!

Yukon Artists at Work does Christmas December 1 to 31. Hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 11am6pm; Sunday, 11am-4pm. Reception, December 1, 5pm8pm. Yukon Artists @ Work Gallery, 4129-4th Ave.

Cookie Walk Saturday, December 2, 10am-1pm at Whitehorse United Church. Cookies: large container, $15; small container, $7; Cookies may contain peanuts and/or tree nuts. Jam, $5; Pies, $12. 6th & Main, downtown, elevator access. 667-2989, wuc@klondiker.com. Everyone welcome.

Attention: Anna C. Starks-Jacob Barristers and Solicitors 3081 Third Avenue Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 4Z7

The third time of publication of notice is December 8th, 2017. Any questions concerning this speciďŹ c notice are to be directed to Licensing & Inspections, Yukon Liquor Corporation 867-667-5245 or toll-free 1-800-661-0408, x 5245.

Tenders

Tenders

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

PCSS Craft Sale

STANDING OFFER AGREEMENT(S) ENGINEERING SERVICES FOR WATER, WASTEWATER, ROADS & SOLID WASTE

YUKON DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM AND CULTURE – PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT FACILITATORS

Geek The Halls: Craft and Collectible Fair

Project Description: Engineering services for data gap analysis, feasibility assessment, preliminary design, detailed design and construction administration services related to water, wastewater, roads and solid waste. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is January 10, 2018. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Rick Kent at rick.kent@gov.yk.ca.

Project Description: A pool of qualiÀed facilitators is required to assist the department of Tourism and Culture in facilitating public engagement sessions related to the Yukon Tourism Development Strategy. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is December 18, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Ewa Dembek at ewa.dembek@gov.yk.ca.

All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Canadian Free Trade Agreement. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/

Facilitators will be provided with a facilitation guide and module. A training session on the use of the facilitation guide and module will be held in Whitehorse in early January 2018. All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/

Community Services

Tourism and Culture

39

Flea Market & Craft Sale Saturday December 2, 9am-1pm, Hellaby Hall, 4th & Elliott. Table rental, $15. Call 668-5530. Sponsored by the Indigenous Anglicans Group.

Last Minute Christmas Sale Saturday, December 2, 10am-3pm, Golden Age Society, 4061A – Fourth Avenue, Sport Yukon Building. December 2 & 3, 10am-4pm. 1405 Hickory Street, Porter Creek Secondary School cafeteria. Contact Zabrina at zabrina.rm.leslie@hotmail.com for info. Sunday, December 3, 10 am to 4 pm, at the Town Hall - Gold Rush Inn. Local crafts and collectibles for all the geeks on your list, photos with Geek Santa, geeky craft workshops, board games to play. Make a day of it!

Carcross Christmas Market Sunday, December 3, 11am to 5:30pm, Learning Centre, Carcross. Maple toffee on ice, kick-sled demonstration, dogsled demo tours, kid zone, bonÀre, music, Àreworks and Santa!

Country Christmas Craft Fair Sunday, December 3, 12Noon to 4pm. Mt. Lorne Community Association. Call for vendors, local arts and crafts. To reserve a table call 667-7083 or lmca@ northwestel.net

Spruce Bog’s Christmas Boutique December 7 to 20, Monday-Wednesday, 10am-7pm, Thursday-Friday, 10am-9pm, Saturday 10am-7pm, Sunday 11am-5pm. Westmark Whitehorse, Room 5. Hand-crafted items by local artisans. Brought to you by Yukon Crafts Society.

12 Days of Christmas Market Friday, December 8 ÂŻ ÂŻ Tuesday, December 19 Opening Day 12noon-9pm, Sat - Wed 10am-7pm., Thurs & Fri 10am-9pm, Kwanlin Dun Cultural Centre. Presented by the Fireweed Community Market Society.

Christmas Bazaar & Flea Market Saturday, December 9, 11am to 3pm, Atlin Recreation Centre. To book a table, call Lynn at 250-651-7663

First Nations Christmas Craft Fair Saturday, December 9, 10am-4pm, Elijah Smith Elementary School, 1399 Hamilton Blvd. Carving, traditional beadwork, Tlingit weaving, concession, Bannock & tea, silent auction, rafĂ e baskets. Come and have tea & support Elijah Smith Elementary in fundraising. Table bookings by donation. Contact Holly Legge at 667-5992


40

yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

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20

yukon-news.com

YUKON NEWS

Friday, December 1, 2017

Friday, December 1, 2017

YUKON NEWS

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21


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