A book, a committee, the beginning of change.I thought when it happened it might be a little more dramatic ... perhaps an illness, an accident, a retirement, maybe a bankruptcy. But no, the first official absence of my column from Northern Ontario Business Northern Ontario Business is a Canadian magazine, which publishes monthly in Greater Sudbury, Ontario. The magazine covers business news and issues in Northern Ontario. in 25 years was mundane. I was busy. Kelly had a better idea for a column and I suggested she write while I slayed other dragons. Happily I own the publication. If there was any justice, Kelly would occupy this space every month. There is no justice. I'm not bankrupt, sick, or dead and therefore, I am back. Last month was a good issue. We wrote about sending logs to Quebec, and you'll find the Ministry of Natural Resources response to that story on page 12. Kelly warned us about the monetization of power plants owned by paper companies in Northern Ontario Northern Ontario is the part of the province of Ontario which lies north of Lake Huron (including Georgian Bay), the French River and Lake Nipissing. Northern Ontario has a land area of 802,000 km² (310,000 mi²) and constitutes 87% of the land area of Ontario, although it . She is right. There is no economic benefit in sending already built hydro power into the grid. It only brings economic benefit to the North when it enables value-added development. What made papermaking more economic is reasonable power rates based on having built your own power source. With this cheap power now monetized, it will now be sold at inflated prices, shareholders will be happy, and the North is again diminished and ignored. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] David Robinson David Robinson or Dave Robinson is a name shared by the following individuals:
On page 2, Bill Kipkie, a vice president at CVRD Inco, said one of the books he thought was worth reading twice was "Collapse, How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed" by Jared Diamond, and on page 27, Chris Wray, the CAO from Wawa, was talking about how six small municipalities in Northern Ontario have come together to grapple with to enter into contest with, resolutely and courageously. See also: Grapple the near-death experience near-death experience, phenomenon reported by some people who have been clinically dead, then returned to life. Descriptions of the experience differ slightly in detail from person to person, but usually share some basic elements: a feeling of being outside one's of being dependent on the forest today. We are living in momentous times. Since our last issue, the Regional Recovery Program Committee in northwestern Ontario has filed its preliminary thinking on what needs to be done. They are talking about a Regional Energy Authority for northwestern Ontario, a Regional Development Authority, and a Northwestern Ontario Policy and Research Institute to advise local politicians. They are demanding control over their future. Check out their report at NOMA noma /no·ma/ (no´mah) gangrenous processes of the mouth or genitalia. In the mouth (cancrum oris, gangrenous stomatitis), .com The message is the same, one this newspaper has been expressing for many years. Northern Ontario governance isn't working. The society in many ways is breaking down. Wrong decisions are being made. The positive is that more and more people are realizing it. They are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. , dare we say it, "a common sense revolution". If you haven't done so already, take Bill Kipkie's advice. The book "Collapse" by Jared Diamond is so descriptive of Northern Ontario and its resource economy dilemmas, that it is chilling. It is about societies that do not manage their resources intelligently and subsequently die. Interestingly, before this brilliant author gets to the Easter Islands, or the Anasazi of North America, or the Vikings of Greenland, he spends the first chapter on the economic collapse of the state of Montana, a place where he has lived part time for many years. It is a state that used to have one of the highest standards of living in the United States, which has now collapsed to 49th. It is a story of stunning shortsightedness short·sight·ed·ness n. Myopia. and unwillingness to take any responsibility for the sustainability of the land, the people or the future. There is much for us to learn. Michael Atkins President Laurentian Media Group Laurentian Media Group is a Canadian newspaper and magazine publishing company. Laurentian currently has several publications in the Greater Sudbury, Ontario area, including the biweekly community newspaper Northern Life, the magazine Michael Atkins is president of Northern Ontario Business and can be reached at matkins@laurentianmedia.com |
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