Editor & Publisher: Meanwhile, Up North, A Newspaper Chain Actually Flourishes
Thursday, 14 August 2008, 15:43
"[W]hile publicly traded U.S. newspaper companies troop to Business Wire with reports of sinking revenues, poor same-store comps — and difficulty staying within their loan covenants ratio limits of 6 or 7 times — out in Vancouver, B.C., Glacier Media Inc. this week quietly released some eye-popping Q2 results."
Saturday, 14 June 2008, 12:29
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"The Toronto Star’s new Map of the Week project has published a set of school vaccination maps which illuminates an ongoing measles outbreak in the Toronto metro area — the worst in more than a decade."
Thursday, 14 February 2008, 13:58
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Reporter collects vox pops after a Canadian newspaper closes. One shrugs and says "I’m on the internet".
Monday, 10 December 2007, 17:32
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The National Post in Canada is live-blogging Conrad Black’s sentencing…
Saturday, 17 November 2007, 09:23
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Cameraphone ‘citizen journalist’ Paul Prichard wants to become a professional: "I’m looking into a journalism route now," he said. "I’m really interested in how the media has worked. I’ve got to see the whole media side of things and it’s kind of sparked
Saturday, 17 November 2007, 09:20
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Editor on the he amateur video of the taser death in Vancouver, Canada: " Despite the skepticism of many in the business, including me, it’s easy to see in cases such as this how valuable they are."
Sunday, 14 October 2007, 10:36
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"Greenpeace activists on Saturday blockaded a cargo ship they claimed was carrying newsprint made from trees felled in Canadian old growth forests."
Wednesday, 22 August 2007, 10:20
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"FT.com’s interactive feature maps the estimated 233bn barrels of oil equivalent, and illustrates the region with a picture slideshow and audio narration by experts."
Thursday, 16 August 2007, 23:36
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WikiScanner "shows that computers inside [Canada's] federal government offices are responsible for more than 11,000 changes to articles"
Canada warns the US (and Europe) over Arctic
Sunday, 29 January 2006, 10:47
Canada’s incoming Conservative government was supposed to forge warmer relations with Washington. But the Canadian prime minster-designate, Stephen Harper has already started making decidedly frosty noises about the United States meddling in some of the coldest places on Earth:
… on Thursday as the Prime Minister-elect used his first post-election press conference to take direct aim at David Wilkins, the US ambassador to Canada, who last week described the North-west Passage as “neutral waters”.
Mr Harper was not asked by reporters about the ambassador’s comment, but he refused to let it pass unchallenged.
“The United States defends its sovereignty, the Canadian government will defend our sovereignty,” he said. “It is the Canadian government we get our mandate from, not the ambassador of the United States.”
Some background, from the Toronto Star:
… most media hadn’t paid attention to Wilkins’ remarks, largely because they weren’t news. The United States, as well as Japan and the European Union, insist that the ice-choked passage, which winds through the archipelago of the Canadian Arctic to link the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, is an international waterway.
Theoretically, Canada disagrees. But since 1945, it has signed a host of secret treaties that give American warships and submarines unimpeded access to these and other Canadian waters.
In 1988, Conservative prime minister Brian Mulroney and U.S. president Ronald Reagan signed a pact whereby Washington agreed to tell Ottawa before sending non-military ships through the Northwest Passage.
In return, Ottawa agreed to never say no.
Harper wants to spend lots of Canadian dollars on underwater sensors and a new deep-water harbour in Iqaluit. But as the Star piece points out, the practical effect of all this posturing is more or less nil:
Is Harper prepared to tear up the treaties that already give the U.S. effective carte blanche in the Arctic? Would his three icebreakers attempt to ram the American fleet if it decided to steam through the Northwest Passage?
If his underwater sensors detect a U.S. submarine skulking along the coast of Ellesmere Island, would he have the Canadian Forces drop depth charges?
Still, it’s symbolically important. Asserting sovereignty over its sparcely populated but resource-rich Arctic archipeligo is of major symbolic significance for Ottawa, and has in recent years become one of Canada’s major foreign and defence policy objectives.
But it has become a bigger issue in recent years. With global warming making the Arctic region increasingly accessible, there is an increased interest in exploring for fossil fuels and trade routes. Long-dormant border disputes among the normally friendly Arctic countries suddenly have real consequences and are being re-examined.
Sometimes it is just symbolic. Canada’s maritime border with Greenland is fairly settled — with one tiny exception. Hence last summer’s kerfuffle with Denmark over barren Hans Island.
But there are also places where serious oil exploration, fishing and shipping rights are at stake. For example, there’s the small matter of the 30-year-old dispute between the United States and Canada over how Alaska’s border with Canada’s Yukon Territory extends into the Beaufort Sea. While Canada asserts that Alaska’s long straight land border along 140° west longitude should extend into the sea, the U.S. argues that the maritime border should be perpendicular to the shoreline, resulting in a triangular wedge of disputed — and potentially oil-rich — ocean territory just northeast of Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
The US Minerals Management Service, which oversees drilling on the United States’ continental shelf, estimates that the Beaufort Sea could contain about 7 billion barrels of oil and 32 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. In August 2004, the Minerals Management Service sold leases for oil development including a handful of tracts inside the disputed region, prompting a diplomatic protest from Ottawa. The State Department responded by reaffirming the American claim.
This is not the last we will have heard of this issue.
Using Canada’s freedom of information law, the Access to Information Act, journalists have discovered a government document advocating the legalisation of polygamy in Canada. Comments Jan 13, '06
Vancouver Sun: Canadian tax officials stored pirated MP3s on government computers. Comments Jan 10, '06
Canada flexes Arctic muscles
Monday, 29 August 2005, 14:48
For those who have missed it, the NATO allies Canada and Denmark are in a border spat over a tiny, remote island off Greenland north of the Arctic Circle.
The RCN has been conducting “Arctic sovereignty patrols” in the nippy region. In July, the RCN planted a flag on Hans Island, and the Canadian defense minister Bill Graham later made an unannounced visit, prompting protests from Copenhagen, which dispatched its own naval ships to region. Before things got ugly, the two countries decided to settle the dispute at the United Nations.
Now Canada is set to use a privatly-owned satellite to monitor the Arctic north, according to ministerial briefing notes obtained by the Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act, Candada’s Freedom of Information legislation:
Canada will be spending C$400m on images from the Radarsat 2 satellite, which will be launched next summer:
Passing over the North Pole 14 times daily, recording images of ships, aircraft — even pollution — at a rate of 3,000 square kilometres per second, it will be the linchpin in the Canadian military’s Project Polar Epsilon.
The documents insist that “Polar Epsilon has no connection to the U.S. ballistic missile defence program.”
Update: Here’s a post putting all this into context from the Canadian position.









