Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.02.1986, Side 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.02.1986, Side 5
WINNIPEG, FÖSTUDAGUR 28. FEBRÚAR 1986-5 The WorlcTs Toughest Newspaper Beat News/North is distributed to every community in the Northwest Ter- ritories. Newspaper carriers in many cases are hush pilots. Continued from Page 4. but Horton had borrowed $500 to get to Yellowknife and couldn't afford to leave. He struggled along in boom- town Yellowknife and made the newspaper click. Horton was a strong advocate of local news. "If an atomic bomb landed on Edmonton it might be a story in News of the North," he once said, "but then on- ly if it had passed over Yellowknife." Sigvaldason came north 16 years ago as editor of News of the North from Winnipeg where he had spent 18 years in the advertising agency business. After an editorial dispute with the owner of the paper he and a fellow journalist, Jack Adderley, were fired the day before Christmas, 1971. Two months later the two started a competing paper, the Yellowknifer. "Our editorial objec- tive was to have a ball and make a buck. We started with one camera, one typewriter and a thousand dollars. The first couple of issues were produced on my kitchen table and the very first issue I finished in my hotel room in Edmonton, the city where the paper was printed. I had a hole left to fill so I sold the hotel manager an ad in exchange for the cost of my room." In 1980 Sigvaldason had prospered enough to buy News of the North (which he renamed News/North). He retained ownership of the Yellowknifer, developed it as a com- munity paper and changed the direc- tion of News/North to become a ter- ritorial newspaper. With a paid circulation of 10,000 copies the 32 to 40 page weekly tabloid offers a great mix of material with emphasis on political and business news, plus columns and fea- tures. All copy is locally written with occasional freelance pieces but no wire service or syndicate stories. "We deal with issues that have a fair- ly broad spectrum of importance. We don't concern ourselves with the restricted community activities be- cause there are. community news- papers that do the 'brownie fly-up' type of story. We are more concerned with social, economic, cultural and political stories and the causes and implications of these stories. We also do a good deal of feature coverage and individual profiles. I'm sure that over the year there is no community in the Northwest Territories that hasn't received coverage in some way". News/North has four reporters — two in Yellowknife, plus two one- man bureaus, one in Hay River, on the south shore of Great Slave Lake, and the other in Inuvik, near the Arc- tic Ocean where much of the Beaufort oil drilling activity is cen- tered — and a "stringer" in Frobisher Bay, the Government Administrative Centre for the Eastern Arctic. "Our next office will be in Ottawa. In fact I may go this winter, then rotate staff from here on a 60-day basis." "Why Ottawa? It's still the source of the vast amount of decision mak- ing," he says. "The relationship be- tween the North and Ottawa and the Provinces and Ottawa is so much dif- ferent because so many decisions are made there, especially in the oil and gas industry. Ottawa is almost a clearing house for information and you see people quite regularly (the decision makers) even though they're mostly from the north. You have a hell of a better chance of talking with an official from Inuit Taparisat in Ot- tawa then you have travelling'a few thousand miles around the Arctic.” He comments that "Northerners The Ardal-Geysir Lutheran Con- gregation is well on the way to see- ing its building program through to completion. Rising from the site of the former Ardal Lutheran Church on River Road West, the new building is a source of pride to the Congregation, and to the village as a whole. Designed by local architectoral stu- dent Blair Holm, and two of his class- mates Tim Borys and Ralph Buschow, the church features an open beam sanctuary whose central support beam rises to a peak above a broad sweeping lower roof. Clerestary windows highlight the up- per section beneath the peak and of- fer a soft, natural light to the sanc- tuary. At the street level, the front wall consists of three planes, giving are the most pragmatic people in the world. While Quebec was fighting to get out of confederation we were fighting to get in. Northerners are masters of consensus. If you look at the North over the last 10 years there have been some near insurmountable problems solved involving social, economic, political and ethnic con- siderations. We endeavour to reason with politicians and bureaucrats in Ottawa. We try to negotiate agree- ments, to influence, to educate. I think we are pragmatic because we win some battles and those we lose we don't cry about. "What do I look to from Ottawa? First the opportunity to control as many decisions affecting the North a frontal exposure to the southeast. Decorative Tyndall stone will finish the central area of the front wall, and to either side light brown vertical siding blends with the brown roofing. From a practical point of view, the interior is designed with multiple use areas. The sanctuary can expand in- to the hall area and vice-versa, thus accomodating overflow attendance at special services without being large, and costly to maintain. Local contractor, Brian Eyolfson of Harbour Builders, is in charge of con- struction, having tendered suc- cessfully for the job. Council presi- dent, David Gislason, says that work is proceeding on schedule and the building should be ready for oc- cupancy by the end of April or as by people on the scene here in the North. I think it is extremely impor- tant that there is a move that way because decisions made on the scene are better decisions. . . Ottawa bureaucrats have a divided interest because they are responsible for broader based areas.” Sigvaldason spent four months in Ottawa last year "and it took me that long again to get my head straight — it's the never-never land. I had to travel the North for four months to get back to thinking in a rational manner." "I think the most important edi- torial accomplishment the paper has made is a better understanding and awareness of other people in the Arc- tic. The people of Gjoa Haven now know more about the people in Fort Simpson than they used to." The challenges of publishing a newspaper in the North are tremen- dous. Distance is probably the big- gest single factor, and then the high cost of operating. "Our labour costs here are not only higher in general but the percentage of gross sales that we spend on labour tends to be higher because of the high cost of transportation and communication. If you have an equipment breakdówn in a large centre you can pick up the phone and have a technician in an hour. Here it may take two to three days to fly a technician up and it may cost $1,000." Sigvaldason is optimistic about the rewards of his northern business. "I describe Yellowknife as the biggest small town in the world. The entire North is a tremendous hot spot. Far- reaching decisions are being made every day in the North. Perhaps the biggest reward, whether it's as a newspaper publisher or a politician, is that you are one very big frog in a very small puddle. The oppor- tunities are here to accomplish things on a large scale." soon as all services are connected. The Village of Arborg is proceeding with plans to extend sewer and water services down William Street from First Avenue to provide for service to the new building. Designated Gifts Members and friends of the Árdal- Geysir Evangelical Lutheran Church are invited to make specific gifts towards finishing the new building. Any contributions will be gratefully received and receipts will be issued. A designated gifts committee has been established to receive donations. Contact Mrs. Barbara McCannell, P.O. Box 106, Arborg, Manitoba, R0C 0A0. Phone no.: 378-5541. Ardal-Geysir Lutheran Church in Arborg near completion

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