Governments never learn. Only people learn. - Milton Friedman
"I don’t think we spend too much money on it in the government. I just don’t think that we spend it very well. I think we spend it in a very cliquish, narrow sort of way. But I don’t think that we need to spend a lot more. I certainly don’t think that we should spend a lot less. .. Art and culture critic Robert Fulford on arts spending in a Frontier Conversation . . .          "Politicians don’t realize that the science is not settled on climate change. They think it’s a done deal and it’s inevitable that they have to take action so the question that they face is what type of action should we take? But I think they need to step back and do the science because it’s not clear that there is a problem because of climate change. There may be no problem at all." - Frontier's conversation with Lawrence Solomon, author of "The Deniers" . . . .           "As a thought experiment, if SaskPower, SaskEnergy and SaskTel were privately owned and independently regulated, would the public of Saskatchewan support a government policy to borrow billions of dollars to nationalize them?" - a Frontier conversation with Sheldon Schwartz . . .           Although Human Rights Commissions were founded to address insupportable abuses in the areas of employment and accommodation, their mandate has been unwisely expanded to include what is, in effect, a censor’s role. Read the latest Policy Series Paper . . .           Allowing public housing tenants the "right to buy" - a Frontier Policy Series Paper . . .           Getting rich by exporting water to the United States - read the provocative new Frontier Backgrounder . . .          Frontier's first video documentary debuts - Watch "Your Land is not Your Land" - How the RM of Ellice expropriated an 87 year old farmer's property for murky "tourism development" purposes.          Professor Bryan Schwartz explores Manitoba as a "supplicant society" - A Conversation on the Frontier . . .          Test your climate change knowledge on Frontier's Smart Green Climate Change Quiz . . .          Making the case for fiscal constitutions in the provinces - Leveling the Spending Field - a Policy Series Paper . . .          Our schoolkids are being taught a particular environmental ideology - why that's a problem - A Frontier Education Backgrounder . . .           Making the case that principals should not be in the teachers' union - another Education Backgrounder . . .          When factors such as household income are controlled, there is no evidence that greater access to computers at school has a positive correlation with academic achievement . . . Read the Frontier Backgrounder on computers in our schools . . .          Indigenous Peoples from an International Perspective - Comparing aboriginals in Australia, New Zealand and Canada - Policy Series Paper . . .          The Frontier Centre for Public Policy releases its 2nd Annual Aboriginal Governance Index, based on a weighted composite of scores evaluating six broad areas of good governance. This year's index covers 112 Aboriginal communities in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Read Canada's only independent assessment of First Nations governance here . . .          A Canadian and European think tank jointly release the first ever international consumer-focused bench-marking of national healthcare systems comparing Canada and 29 European countries. We unveil the 2008 Euro-Canada Health Consumer Index . . .          A smarter way to fight poverty - "Removing more people at the bottom of the income ladder entirely from the tax code is a superior means of fighting poverty." - Read the Policy Series Paper . . . .          The line losses on Manitoba's planned west side transmission line alone will generate greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to an extra 40,000 cars a year. Read the Policy Series Paper - "A Thread Down a Football Field" . . .           Frontier Centre releases its inaugural comprehensive evaluation of the finances of Canada's 30 most populous cities - read our preliminary snapshot of the financial landscape of urban Canada as profiled in the 2007 Local Government Performance Index . . .          David MacKinnon, Ontario critic of regional subsidies discusses how "unthinking money" from Ontario and Alberta retards Manitoba's policy landscape, a Conversation on the Frontier . . .          "Notwithstanding a weaker propensity to invest and expand, publicly retained SaskTel is indistinguishable from MTS . . ." - read the Policy Series Paper comparing SaskTel and MTS . . .          Taking all the cars off Canada’s roads would get us only halfway to Kyoto’s targets for greenhouse gas reductions. . . 10 "Smart Green" ideas to reduce greenhouse gases. . .           Modernizing environmental policy in Canada - the seven principles for making policy "smart green" - A Frontier Policy Series Paper . . .           
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The Frontier Centre for Public Policy is an independent public policy think tank whose mission is "to broaden the debate on our future through public policy research and education and to explore positive changes within our public institutions that support economic growth and opportunity." ...More

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Why Our Independence Matters to You

1. No Government Funding

Because we seek to comment objectively on public policy, FCPP is the only registered Prairie-based think tank which declines government grants.

2. Diversified Funding Base

We diversify our funding base as much as possible to ensure that we are not beholden to any particular industry, interest or persons. Individuals and businesses that see value in exploring better policy support FCPP. The bulk of our funding comes from charitable foundations that support public policy work in Canada.

3. Board/Staff Firewall

A respected Board of Research Advisors guarantees the independence and integrity of our work. The Centre has a formal policy, embodied in a Board of Directors resolution, that forbids any direct Board involvement or influence in the Centre's education efforts.

For an objective, arm's length take on public policy you can trust the very independent . . . Frontier Centre for Public Policy.


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Frontier Centre Comments

Residential Schools Propaganda?
August 08, 2008
I always enjoy getting updates from Frontier and reading what you have to say. I just wanted to comment on the residential school article about the fact there was also good that went on. My mother-in-law who had only positive experiences at her school and has nothing ill to say about it received a cheque last year for 35,000 no questions asked and was told there would be more. More -- E-mail from Pauline, Ontario

What Does the End of Cheap Oil Mean to our Urban Future?
August 05, 2008
I share Mr. McShane's confidence in the ability of our market system to solve the effects of a higher oil price and to deliver an even more productive economy in the process -- if -- and it's a big if. Mr. McShane makes the point in his 2nd-last sentence. "That is what we are all so good at -- provided no 'wise elite' decides to make our decisions for us." More -- E-mail from David Barber, Director of the Cordillera Institute, Toronto

Conversation on the Frontier with Lawrence Solomon
July 18, 2008
While I think that it is appropriate to retain a stance of sober objectivity, and even skepticism with respect to global warming, it seems that we are in a period of general warming, judging by the evidence of mountain glaciers and polar ice.

However, this trend has been going on for over 150 years, starting long before human activity or carbon dioxide production had significant influence on the atmosphere. The longer trend extends from the last ice age. More -- E-mail from Kolkatta, India

The Residential School Money Pit
June 12, 2008
I want to congratulate and thank Don Sandberg for his honest, candid and courageous article on residential schools in today's WFP. We need more articles like this from people like you who can sift through the mis-information and partial truths. I have thought for some time that we have not been getting the full story and now am grateful for at least some confirmation. If there are other articles like this which you can direct me to, I'd be grateful. More -- E-mail from Derek Denwood

Another View on Residential Schools
June 12, 2008
This is best and most accurate story about the residential schools that I have read. Why isn't it more publicized instead of all the negative stories about the schools. There were some bad things about them but the idea was good. -E-mail from Winnipeg

The Residential School Money Pit
June 11, 2008
Many thanks for the comments contained in the Email Update (Residential Schools Story not that Simple) and in the June 11, 2008 Winnipeg Free Press column (P. A15) by Don Sandberg. Both were incredibly appropriate. I was once very much involved with the aboriginal community and later became an instructor at a Residential School. While I am certain that there would have been abuses in some Schools, I am just as certain that the incidences of such abuse were less than in the general population. More -- E-mail from Winnipeg

Auditor General Has Point On First Nation Finances
June 11, 2008
Thanks to Joseph Quesnel for his recent article on aboriginal spending. Some time ago, I was the author of a letter printed in the Hamilton Spectator on this very same theme. I'm sure I'm not the only Canadian taxpayer who is extremely concerned about the lack of accountability for the monies we so generously allocate to natives. -- E-mail from Barbara Joy

The End Of The Fake Consensus On Global Warming
June 09, 2008
I think "global warming" is settled. It is BUNK. I don't know who dreamed this up, or why, but it diverts our attention from solving real problems such as finding alternatives to oil, pollution and environmental destruction — not to mention starvation and disease. -E-mail from Regina

Indigenous Peoples from an International Perspective
May 16, 2008
It seems to me that we in Canada may be looking at things the wrong way. Is it that there are problems on Indian Reserves, or is it that the whole archaic concept of Indian Reserves is the problem? The bottom line is, the Cook Islands are doing very well thank you; NO RESERVES HERE.

More - E-mail from Bob Foster, Winnipeg, MB

The End Of The Fake Consensus On Global Warming
May 12, 2008
Now, does that mean that our CO-2 discharges don’t affect our climate? If you have ever been to a bar before smoking was banned, think of yourself in a small room filled with a cloud of cigarette smoke for 4 hours. Of course there is an effect. I also believe in the solar heat idea. Stand back from a boiler and it’s not so bad. Move closer and you get hotter. Duh!

More - E-mail from North Vancouver, BC

Smart Green Climate Change Quiz
April 27, 2008
While Al Gore bounces around the stage at whim..why not get Oprah to hear the *other* side..I think it might ease some peoples pain..lots of fearmongering going on. - Email from Mrs. Vaughn, Medicine Hat, Alberta

The Transfers Trap
April 07, 2008
I enjoyed your article in this morning’s Winnipeg Free Press titled “The Transfers Trap”. I think this is a very valid, important issue that Manitobans need to understand. However, I think the average Manitoban has very little understanding of this issue and all of the issues surrounding it. This article was written assuming a high level of education on this issue, which I think is lacking. Please continue to talk about this but I would suggest keeping it as simple as possible in future articles as it is a hard one to understand. I think you would then reach a larger audience. This is so important it would be nice if the average Manitoban understood what was really going on. - E-mail from Winnipeg

An Answer from When Ontario Comes Calling
April 07, 2008
Fantastic article on transfer payments....I just sold my biz in MB and moving..no wonder! 50 years is enough. E-mail from Winnipeg

Temperatures dropping
March 24, 2008
Here in the Philippines, as petroleum products including LPG for cooking have become more expensive, some of our already abused mountains and forest lands have become totally denuded and deforested as more poor households are shifting to firewood and charcoal, so more and more trees are being cut. And the state's Environment bureaucrats are nowhere to be seen stopping these large-scale cutting of trees by tens of thousands of poor people. The bureaucrats are holed up in their air-conditioned offices, or attending meetings and conferences on climate change. - E-mail from the Phillippines

Global temperature cooling
March 14, 2008
When I was an undergrad, global cooling was the mantra I was taught. The environmental catastrophe is upon us, etc., etc. E-mail from Calgary

First Nations Pathologies Can't be Solved with More Government Money
February 28, 2008
I just wanted to commend you on your couragous article in the Star Phoenix this morning concerning the death of two children on the Yellow Creek reserve. I say courageous because to state this kind of truth for the record and publicly in our current political climate takes true grit and strength of character. I am not in the habit of looking writers up on the internet but I really felt compelled to comment on an article that stated the harsh truth but without disrespect and contempt. Keep up the good work. I hope it will make a difference. - Anne-Marie Hughes,
letter to editor, Saskatoon Star-Phoenix

Eat Beef to Help the Environment
February 21, 2008
Cattle ranching is spreading like a virus across the planet, gobbling up our precious, ecologically diverse and carbon dioxide absorbing forests. It is no exaggeration to say that the expansion of ranching is a crisis that must be stopped, if life on Earth as we know it is to continue. Richard Brunt, Victoria

Which Best Helps the Poor?
February 19, 2008

Great work. Enjoyed David Pankratz's brief on the issue of minimum wage as well as your op-ed. It is great seeing that level of information provided and hopefully serves to educate the general public in the government's misdirected attempts to address poverty. E-mail from Winnipeg

Euro-Canada Consumer Health Index
January 25, 2008
The ECCHI is a comprehensive and revealing report on the state of health care. I applaud everyone at FCPP who contributed to making Canada part of this important study. The results are rather shocking and upsetting for many Canadians but will be invaluable if they encourage a renewed interest in the evolution of our health system to a model that is responsive to the needs of an increasingly informed and empowered population.
Well Done! - Dr. Vaughan Glover (Pres and Founding Member of the Canadian Association for People-Centred Health)



Euro-Canada Consumer Health Index
January 25, 2008
Congratulations on your report. It is a major wake up call to Canadians. - Dr. Brian Day, President of the Canadian Medical Association

Euro-Canada Consumer Health Index
January 22, 2008
Very professional and objective study. Congratulations. Dr. Jacques Chaoulli

What Best Helps the Poor?
January 17, 2008
Bravo on your health care work and also on David Pankratz's research on tax policy and poverty! -E-mail from Winnipeg

New Funding for Native Entrepreneurs Positive Move
January 14, 2008
Excellent article on a subject most Canadian have no knowledge. You might follow this up with one documenting the number of successful actions against organizations that do not follow proper procedure re terminating employees who have 'offended' someone of importance. E-mail from Manitoba

Climate Change
January 11, 2008
I am a grade 12 Global Studies teacher at a high school in Nova Scotia. I want to thank you for the copy of "Unstoppable Global Warming - Every 1500 Years". Even though global warming specifically is not part of my curriculum, current issues are, and I have been reading about the topic for the past few years. I think I felt quite informed about global warming, climate change, etc. before it became as big as it now is in the media. Of course, I have read, about three times, Tim Flannery's book, "The Weather Makers" and many news articles, National Geographic, as much as I could, in order to feel able to share what I felt was (to use Al Gore's words) a moral obligation with my students. After reading Singer and Avery's book, I experienced a numbers of emotions: confused, annoyed, misled, gullible, and more. Also a little angry. I still do not know what to believe, I am not a scientist at all, and some of their work is a bit difficult for me to understand. I do get the message, however. I expect I will change my global warming/climate change unit next semester to one that focusses more upon bias in the media, and the power to generally create mainstream hysteria. At the same time, I don't want to be responsible for (again, to quote Al Gore) "manufacturing doubt" in the minds of my young students. Very confusing and what feels like a huge resposiblity for me. Those two scientists are very convincing. I think the thing that angers me the most is the effect all of this is having on young people. I am also a mother of two children, ages 19 and 21. It is unacceptable that our young people, at this idealistic, hopeful age should be carrying such a burden of pessimism, especially if human caused global warming is untrue or highly exaggerated. E-mail from Nova Scotia

Eat Beef to Help the Environment
January 11, 2008
Please congratulate Robert Supuck for his great article appearing in to-days National Post. It's too bad more of the so called environmentalists don't share his views. E-mail from Gerry Kaumeyer

Our misplaced priorities . . .
January 08, 2008
In my view, the most important environmental issue facing the world today is the fact that one billion of the world's population lives on less than $1.00 a day. excerpt from letter by Andy Wells, Mayor of St. John's, Newfoundland Read entire letter

Environmental Policy: More Science and Less Religion Please
December 18, 2007
After reading your headline, "More Science and Less Religion Please," I open the correspondence you send to find a quote by Chesterton, the author of Orthodoxy, and a story about the pope taking a swipe at the global warming crowd? LOL...Less religion please... LOL This is too funny! (Forgive me you guys, but I couldn't stop laughing when I saw how this was presented!)

As I am sure you know, Chesterton consistently and always referred to himself as an "Orthodox Christian," and is regarded by both religious liberals and religious conservatives as one of theirs. You have to admit that a "less religion please" headline, in an online newsletter with a Chesterton quote that supposedly affirms such a headline, followed by an article about of all people, the pope, has to make somebody laugh...

Keep up the good work. I love what you do; you do it well; but I do think you may want to rethink suggesting that science and religion are at odds... A whole lot of people, including many great scientific thinkers, would take exception to such an idea. More . . .

E-mail from Kevin Avram, Arizona

Climate Change
December 17, 2007
In reading in one of your articles that noted the global-warming-warning are creating their own economy, I wondered "Has any reporter ever attempted to "follow the money?" "
It would be interesting to know who would get rich if certain "fixes" were put in place. For example, I hear politicians tell prairie farmers they will make money selling "carbon credits", and while I wonder how that is proposed to work some articles add there will be/is a special carbon credit exchange (is that sort of like a stock exchange) where the "credits" would be sold/traded, and later I read things like "Al Gore has ownership as an investor/founder of the exchange he's promoting". Will Al Gore make millions off the exchange he's promoting?Will he make more than the farmers ? How will the money get from the consumer to the manufacturing-industy to the farmer, and how much will the middle industries , like the "exchange owners" take? If governments are financially penalized for failing to meet quotas, how much of that money would go to the money grabber's in the middle, and how much will go back to consumers or farmers?
I'd be very interested in seeing someone do an article that would "follow the money", to put a new but relevant perspective on the debate. -Email from Saskatchewan

2007 LGPI
December 02, 2007
I was very pleased to download and review the above mentioned report. It was very good.

Accurate financial reporting is the main concern for municipalities. My experience in reviewing financial statements and other local government reports across the country reflects more bad reporting than acceptable data.
This is not good for democracy. More . . . E-mail from Ottawa

Toronto summary
December 01, 2007
I think the authors of this report appear to not understand anything about the City of Toronto or its budgeting process whatsoever. Toronto Mayor David Miller - Read Frontier's reply - Our research has not been in any way, to quote Mr Millar, 'shoddy'. It has been hampered though by very poor public information coming out of Toronto and many other Canadian city's annual financial reports. more . . .

How Urbanization Changes Environmental Policy
November 22, 2007
I enjoyed your article in Today’s Free Press. It was right on the mark! I appreciated your comments about clear cut logging and the subsequent forest regeneration and renewal.

Also, congratulations on your appointment to the National Roundtable on the Environment and the Economy. E-mail from Winnipeg

Your Land is not Your Land
November 21, 2007
You published an absolutely stunning article, let me congratulate you for choice of words and facts to support it.
I am sure it will serve as an eye opener for those who don't yet understand that they have no rights nor freedoms.
I'd be honoured to shake your hand one day!
E-mail from Ontario

Your Land is not Your Land
November 21, 2007
I just read Rolf Penner's op-ed in the National Post. Great stuff!
Please let me know if there's anything I can do to assist in helping Mr. Fouillard's cause or the Frontier Centre. I'm already on your mailing list and would like to get involved. E-mail from Ontario

Window on Two Policy Models
October 27, 2007
The article by David Seymour is full of the same platitudes that have become the standard fare of the Frontier Institute: i.e. that public ownership is bad, private ownership is good. He must be aware that there is still a lot of residual animosity to the corporation that MTS has become. But rather than acknowledging its problems he pushes on to attack what I hear is a well-run public utility. From my personal experience as a MTS customer, I can say very little that would support the notion that the new MTS is an improvement over the public version of the company. With poor communication about rates and nickel-diming customers for the slightest adjustment to hardware in the house, it comes across as a corporation that seeks to squeeze every bit of money it can from its customers. In my area near Stonewall, I have been asking for four years about getting high-speed Internet access, only to be told that my area needs new switching equipment or some other lame excuse. I'm 10 minutes from the Perimeter Highway. I'm sure that SaskTel may have its problems but please don't tell me that I'm better off with this big corporation. It just isn't so. William Pura, Letter to editor, Winnipeg Free Press

Window on Two Policy Models
October 27, 2007
The article in View from the West by David Seymour (Tale of two telcos, Oct. 24) confirms my opinion expressed several months ago about the sale of MTS by the "bad ship Tories". Seymour has facts not available to me that shows a government-run phone system cannot move fast enough to keep up with the changes in this rapidly changing business. Perhaps Gary Filmon and company recognized this and acted as a responsible government should and divested itself of a Crown corporation at a good time. The facts in Seymour's article show that the provincial government has benefited by this privatization. While I do not see anything wrong with Crown corporations, I do see the danger of government interference in their decisions. The imposed decision by Gary Doer to run the hydro line down the west side of the lake is a prime example of wrongheaded decision-making and interference in decisions best left to engineers, not politicians. George E. Poulter, Letter to Editor, Winnipeg Free Press

SaskEd Measures Up
October 09, 2007
Sask Ed might be measuring achievement but at what cost? We in SK no longer use the reliable CTBS because it would show how our student's achievement has declined over time. Manitoba with its socialist government might have problems in education but ours is absolutely terrible itself with huge sums spent on the new huge school divisions with administrators falling over themselves to waste resources. E-mail from Saskatchewan

Drug Dealers and Global Warming - Parallel Parables?
October 01, 2007

I read with interest several articles complied by your Centre on the present debate re: global warming & climate change. I am a retired scientist from Environment Canada and I hold a dissenting view of the present view of the science. I feel that the global warming science has not been well understood nor well explained by its proponents and especially by the environmental lobby.



In my view Global Warming & associated climate change would be beneficial to Canada , a cold country with large areas in western Canada having long wintry climate which can be stressful to human as well as plant life.



I enlcose a file of an article I published in the UK based Journal Energy & Environment in September 2006. My article entitled " India's economic progress in a changing climate: benefits of global warming!" documents how India and its 1.2 billion people have made economic progress by adapting to a warmer climate of the last fifty years.



I believe that a warmer future climate would be beneficial to Canada in terms of reduced house-heating cost for most Canadians, longer grain and vegetable growing season and a robust growth in forestry in western Canada.



Most Canadians ( retirees like myself) would welcome a warmer future Canada. In my opinion, the deleterious impact of global warming has been exaggerated by the environmental lobby.

- E-mail from Dr M L Khandekar, Unionville, Ontario

Drug Dealers and Global Warming - Parallel Parables?
September 30, 2007
Continue with your campaign of attacking anyone and everyone who is concerned or wants action on global warming. Continue with your campaign of attacking science and scientists who want nothing more than their governments to STOP spending money to study the issue and start funding measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Continue with these things, if you have no attachment to truth and honesty and God. - E-mail from Sean Morrisy, Winnipeg

Drug Dealers and Global Warming
September 25, 2007
I wouldn't claim to have assimilated all the information available, and I'm perfectly prepared to agree that the present global warming may be part of a natural trend. But to pretend that human activities over the past couple of centuries have had no effect at all on the situation is stubborn ignorance carried to criminal levels. Peter Lacey, Winnipeg

Poverty Policies Tend to Impoverish
September 15, 2007
Perhaps letter writer Andrew Bonner should have taken more than just a quick glance around the world when discussing the successes and failures of laissez-faire economics. Ironically, the letter writer lives in London, England, which is proving to be one of the great success stories of laissez-faire economics in the past quarter century. Through reduced regulation and an increased focus on attracting foreign investment, this centre has reversed its general decline and is now, arguably, the most important financial centre in the world and certainly in Europe. Yet another success story is a short plane trip away in Ireland, where economic growth rates have been among the highest in Europe for years, due in large part to low taxation and low government spending policies. Meanwhile, on the continent, in the so-called high-tax countries of France, Italy and Germany, economic growth has been stagnant, resulting in high unemployment and social discourse. Even Sweden, which is often cited by proponents of social welfare policies, has felt the rising pressures on its fiscal policies. In light of this, the people of Sweden recently elected a more fiscally conservative government, as did the French and Germans. It is incorrect to blindly state that the best way to alleviate poverty is the inefficient and wasteful social welfare systems currently in place in Canada and Manitoba. - Letter to editor, Winnipeg Free Press, Craig White, Winnipeg

Poverty Policies Tend to Impoverish
September 13, 2007
If Holle prefers to live in a society in which the people's elected representatives can't intervene in the economy for the common good, he need not push it on us all. He could just move to Guatemala. - Letter to editor, Winnipeg Free Press, Andrew Bonner, London England

Saving Lake Winnipeg with Better Public Policy
August 23, 2007
Great job outlining the issues in this aspect of the water quality management challenge. You have identified a significant problem with the use of blunt regulatory enforcement actions that are not accompanied by investments that will genuinely improve water quality. E-mail from rural Manitoba

Saving Lake Winnipeg with Better Public Policy
August 23, 2007
While you and your NDP friends have pushed Manitoba to being the number one hog province now growing at 15% per year, some of us know the real cost of cleaning up after your pork pals will be too little, too late. - Letter from Lake Winnipeg Cottager, Matlock, Manitoba

10 Years of Toronto Amalgamation
July 22, 2007

Interesting analysis on the amalgamation of the cities in Toronto. I have observed this trend time and time again when the urge to merge is imposed on municipal councils and school boards. The cost of harmonizing union agreements grossly exceeds any potential administrative cost savings.



In addition, the elected Government becomes even more distant from their elected citizens and feel they can pursue policies that are not supported by typical residents.



Within Manitoba, we can observe the folly of this process as well. The Provincial Government encouraged and came close to forcing the amalgamation of school divisions across the province. These new mega divisions have experienced increased costs while the small school divisions that stayed out of the process have continued to provide leading results in educational outcomes and cost-effectiveness.
Email from Manitoba


Lower Rural Prices a Benefit
July 17, 2007
We are no where close the to the typical Toronto-based media portrayal of rural areas as being places of no jobs and no hope to earn a living. However, we are achieving this success in spite of, instead of because of, national and provincial public policies. Email from rural Manitoba

CWB Price Premium Myth
July 07, 2007
Selling or marketing wheat is not about a belief system. Because you believe in the CWB system also does not mean there is more value in that system for all. Penner points out a simple fact and gives information to back it up. I don't have to believe in him to believe him. Posted comment on Agriville.com



A Reserve in Turmoil
June 26, 2007
I'm from St. Theresa Point but have been living in Winnipeg for the past 20 years. Over the years, I have been hearing about the same things that Don Sandberg mentioned in the Free Press. My family has been asking me to move back but as I have five kids, and with the gang problem up there, I don't want to. It is as bad as Sandberg mentioned. The councillors have no idea how to handle things now that the kids are out of hand. I would like to thank Sandberg for letting people know how bad it can get on the reserve. But I'll always feel a little badly because I will no longer be going home. - Email from Winnipeg

The CWB Pricing Premiun Myth
June 18, 2007
Thanks for your work and report, I hope you put it in every paper and bill board in CANADA. No wonder the Americans were taking the CWB to court for dumping CWB wheat into their country. E-mail from Saskatchewan

Seinfeld Election
May 18, 2007

Peter Holle's May 16 column Policies ripe for picking gives the provincial government a viable improvement opportunity for our Manitoba health-care system. Holle suggests eliminating the conflict of interest caused by the fact that regional health authorities both fund and provide services. This practice serves to stifle growth and increase the cost of health-care services.



In a recent study conducted by the Catholic Health Association of Manitoba, funding to the independent Catholic-sponsored health-care organizations was shown to have increased by 28 per cent while the Manitoba health budget increased by 83 per cent over a 10-year period. This fits with Holle's comment that regional health authorities buy services from themselves, which results in raising their own prices, and adding layers of bureaucracy.



The members of the Interfaith Health Care Association encourage the provincial government to carefully study the need to eliminate the regional health authorities' conflict and separate the purchaser from the provider. Our independent, faith-sponsored members are on record with the provincial government as willing partners and collaborators and we could take on a more active role in providing purchased services for Manitobans. - Letter to editor, Winnipeg Free Press from PAM DRIEDGER,
The Interfaith Health Care Association, Gretna

Our Green Dilettantes
May 10, 2007
At least someone is trying to raise the level of discussion to where it ought to be in what has so far been a dreadfully boring election campaign. Given the lack of imagination in any of the platforms, the ideas put forward by the Frontier Center have been nothing short of superb. I hope that one of the leaders will at the very least grab one or two of the ideas presented and take them as their own. So far it's been a "have not" election campaign in a province with perennial "have not" thinking. Good on you! E-mail from Winnipeg

Our Green Dilettantes
May 09, 2007
What a great article. I am in complete agreement with you regarding our subsidized Hydro. I actually did not know until just a month ago that our rates were actually subsidized to BELOW delivery cost. That's just ridiculous! And the only companies we can expect to attract with that are companies with high electricity requirements, which means we lose even more money. I don't think Manitobans are actually aware of the details of this. E-mail from Manitoba

Where Manitoba Stands in 2007
May 07, 2007

Just a note to compliment you on your latest piece about Manitoba's lack of real progress when compared to Alberta and Saskatchewan. You are completely bang on, and let me go so far as to suggest that this was your greatest comment piece ever - clear, to the point, and supported by undeniable facts - facts which should be the real indicators of change (vs the ones we always hear).



The NDP's big government, program-focused thinking is certainly a big part of the problem, but the PCs certainly had their blunders in health care and to Doer's credit, I think his focus on the energy sector (hydro, wind, and biofuel) is going to be eventually seen as visionary some day, especially the wind stuff.



Anyway, I think your piece points to the need for a real vision of where Manitoba wants to go - and the resulting plan of what we need to do to make it happen. Maybe all Manitobans need to be asked to think long and hard about their futures in this province (and about what they are willing to do to achieve their goals); maybe then we will find the Spirited Energy. E-mail from Winnipeg

A common sense look at pollution
April 22, 2007

I enjoyed the opinion that Robert D. Sopuck presented mainly on waste not, want not as a major means of reducing pollution. He takes a very common sense, middle ground stance and exposes the views of both extremes for what they are -- emotional rhetoric. The only thing I would add is how the "David Suzukis and Al Gores" have a vested interest in promoting how our planet Earth is going to "hell in a hand basket" what with climate change and loss of species. If they were to indicate satisfaction with what society is doing, how would they attract the millions of dollars to their foundations?



Sopuck certainly knows how people react in developed countries when he states they want it both ways. Recent polls indicated the environment is the biggest concern. But when asked what they might do to reduce pollution, most of those same people did not feel the onus should fall on them. That was up to big business, government and others. Then, as a put-down to "deep ecologists" ideology, Sopuck suggests governments help business and individuals through legislation and incentives.



As a landowner who is interested in doing things right for the environment and society, I would react more favourably to the carrot. Like most landowners, I am a good steward and feel regulations are offensive and regressive. Best of all, the "deep ecologist" has lost control over me to exact "their urge to save humanity which is often a false front for the urge to rule it." What the Earth needs now are more people like Sopuck, not fearmongers. - Ken Wasmuth, Wainwright, Alberta


Polar Bear as Poster Animal
April 16, 2007
We view the actions of the petitioners (Greenpeace, the Centre for Biological Diversity and the Natural Resources Defense Council) as being for purely political and fundraising purposes. We have pointed out to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife services that the petitioners in no way speak on behalf of the rights and interests of Inuit. - Letter to the Editor - National Post, Mary Simon, President, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami

Climate Change in the Recent Past
April 05, 2007
I happen to agree with you guys on this however, I keep looking over my shoulder to see if I'm being followed by the Global Warming Greenhouse Gas Policia/Brownshirts wondering if I'm going to be apprehended and shot at sunrise. Once this stuff becomes religion as GW/CC stuff has - look out. Al Gore can get away with his $20,000 monthly energy bill because he recants (and says he's trying to solve his problem when really he doesn't give a s...) whereas those of us who feel like fighting... Well, you know what happened when the Catholic Church discovered heretics who refused to recant - especially when they had a bunch of firewood nearby... E-mail from Winnipeg

Monopoly Insurance: Unfair at Any Price
February 13, 2007
These days, insurance is a significant expense. In exchange for our money, we expect to have access to this coverage when we need it. What we have seen elsewhere in Canada is a growing public anger among people who fork out insurance fees but then are afraid to access their coverage for fear of surcharges.
Manitoba Public Insurance provides comprehensive insurance coverage that people are not afraid to access because MPI does not penalize them for doing so. MPI only surcharges when they are responsible for a crash. Private insurers penalize customers for accessing coverage whether they were at fault or not. --
MPI President and CEO Marilyn McLaren

Mark Milke responds: Ontarians can sue for pain and suffering and if they don't like their accident payout. That's why Ontario has higher average premiums. In contrast, Manitoba consumers must simply accept their MPI payouts and tough luck if one doesn't agree. . . .Given that Manitoba's average claim cost is about 17% that of Ontario's while its average premium is about 70% of Ontario's, and given that Manitoba's urban density is less than that in Ontario or Alberta, MPI's insurance prices and coverage are no bargain.



Full text of exchange

Cheaper Car Insurance?
February 12, 2007
Dennis Owens is either a comedian, a cynic, or both. The senior policy analyst for the ideologically axe-grinding organization known as the Frontier Centre for Public Policy actually wrote this sentence: "Milke calls for a return to competitive markets in auto insurance, and cautions the press to be more skeptical about information fed them by people with ideological axes to grind."
Apparently, the caution goes unheeded as the press continues to treat the FCPP as if it weren't a front for "corporatocracy" which issues a steady stream of disinformation based on predetermined "research" by compromised "scholars" happy to steer their studies towards conclusions that suit their masters: government is bad, climate change is scientifically controversial, the market is magical. - JEFF PRESSLAFF in Winnipeg

Cheaper Government Auto Insurance?
February 10, 2007
I was always under the faulty impression that our provincial autopac program brought in car insurance so much cheaper than what was paid in other provinces. I found [the] article very informative -- like a fine wine, [the writer] just gets better with age. E-mail from Portage la Prairie

Cheaper Car Insurance?
February 09, 2007
Thank you for bringing this out in the open! I am unhappy with the no-fault clause. As it stands the person who is not at fault becomes the victim especially if that person is retired, and thus does not suffer loss of wages but may suffer long time hardships as a result of injuries. Please continue to inform your readers.
Thanks E-mail from Winnipeg

Indian Smoking Debate
January 14, 2007
Just wanted to thank you for the honesty and wisdom you presented in the article of Jan 13th in the WFP. I wish there were more of your people who would also address and own up to these real and disturbing issues.

Nothing will change unless aboriginal peoples learn to help themselves and realize monetary promises will not make the change. Everyone needs to be educated and work for a living to earn respect and be responsible for themselves and their families.

I do hope Grand Chief Don Evans read your article albeit I am sure he disagrees with you.

Thanks again and I wish you much success in seeking positive change for your people. E-mail from Winnipeg

Does the Wheat Board make more profit for farmers?
December 17, 2006
I hauled my 06 barley crop 3miles west to my neighbour's small feedlot. He called in yesterday with a cheque. Priced at market -no dockage - no deductions. Another neighbour had his 05 barley accepted for malt. He is still waiting for final payment from the CWB. As well he has paid trucking to Pioneer Whitewood, had dockage and all relevant charges deducted.


My 05 barley was sold to a local feedlot. Priced FOB my yard and I got paid in full for every pound of grain in the bin on the day it was picked up. My neighbour was over for coffee the other day and we calculated that my feed barley sale beat his CWB Malt barley by about .50 cents per bus. He is not a happy farmer. I am not entirely happy either as my barley price is based on a domestic sales only barley market. I can't export barley so the price is therefore influenced by the CWB monopoly.


The point is there are hundreds of markets for grain if one wants to be bothered looking around. The other point is the CWB costs farmer millions of dollars every year.


I'm not neccesarily smarter that my good neighbour. He had faith in the CWB marketing system. I found a better one. - Email from Keith Lewis, Saskatchewan

Does the Wheat Board make more profit for farmers?
December 15, 2006

I respect your right to disagree with the CWB, in a democracy freedom of speech is a right of all: however you think your rights are being denied. Do you understand how a democracy works, the majority rules and not the minority. Speaking of rights, do you agree with the government's gag order on the CWB, talk about denying a fundamental freedom (freedom of speech).



In an interview you said you could make more tens of thousands of dollars more each year if there was no CWB. PROVE IT. It is easy to make statements but can you back it up or are you just making up numbers to get sympathy. Tell me the name or names of the grain companies who will give you these extra tens of thousands of dollars every year. Give me there names and I will contact them so I can verify your claim.



If you can prove this then maybe you are right about dismantling the CWB, but if you can't back up your statement I would ask you to please apologize for making up the story.



I await your reply.



Sincerely yours,



Andy Schewe




Rolf Penner responds . . .







10 “Smart Green” Ideas for Reducing Greenhouse Gases
December 08, 2006
Except for the part about nuclear energy, I cannot understand why Mr. Holle is not a member of and a candidate for the Green Party.

As for nuclear power the big problem is not just the risk of an accident or disposal of spent fuel but what do we do with power plants that have reached the end of their life. Already there are millions of barrels full of the radio-active remains of such plants spread all over the world. Since these barrels include highly radio-active elements with half lives in the thousands of years, we have to ask who is going to keep them safe and secure over those many thousands of years? Currently most of these barrels are out in the open rusting away. How much is it going to cost to repackage and keep them secure for thousands of years, if it even gets done? This is the real cost of nuclear power. I believe that if this very real cost were to be paid now and not laid upon future generations the cost of electricity from nuclear power could well be hundreds of times, maybe even thousands of times, that which consumers are now paying.--
E-mail from Nick Burman, Calgary

Phil, You're Wrong . . .
November 14, 2006
DON SANDBERG writes 'Their people are afraid to invest $20,000 or $30,000 in a reserve-based business, only to see it shut down by the band council for petty political reasons.'
And so they should be afraid to invest. This article passes a smell test that the old 'Give me more money' argument does not pass.
Thanks Don for showing some insight and leadership. - Reader comment in Globe and Mail

In the Fire at Ground Zero
October 28, 2006
Upon reading Friday's October 27th [Winnipeg Free Press]article about "Fast-moving arson fire kills 4 firefighters in California" I was reminded of a closer to home excellent article written by Don Sandberg. At the time I was most impressed because Mr. Sandberg's August 31, 2006 article, "In the fire at Ground Zero," so clearly wrote of tremendous dangers
presented to all Ground Zero firefighters and especially initial attack crews. His article made me aware of the necessity of men with superior decision-making skills and the courage to follow through in the face of nature's vicious unpredictability. These workers are definitely the strong and the brave in the face of a
ferocious enemy. Unsung heroes the lot of them and Mr. Sandberg showed so vividly their dangerous occupation. I hope they get well paid for their efforts! Thank you for printing a much needed article about workers outside the perimeter.E-Mail from Joan Pawlikewich, Winnipeg

High Performance Winnipeg?
October 27, 2006

Peter Holle urged Winnipeggers to envision our city in 2011 as one operating on a "competitive model", relying on "advanced measurement techniques" and "eliminating bureaucracy". Coupled with performance bonuses, customer service surveys and public-private partnerships, Holle's vision is a dream for free-market policy wonks who live for technocratic efficiency. Sadly, his vision would be a dystopia for regular Winnipeggers.



What Holle doesn't spell out is that his ideas would further widen the gap between the rich and poor in our city. Privatizing municipal services and contracting out would further weaken the quality of services we receive while simultaneously eroding the living standards of unionized workers. Performance bonuses for police would increase the ruthlessness of a service already plagued by criticisms of abuse of power and racism. An ethic of care and community would be replaced by one of self-serving egoism and "devil-take-the-hindmost". Maybe instead of having one in four Winnipeg children grow up in poverty, we could aim for one in two. Finally, instead of ideas of participatory municipal citizenship, Holle offers up an emaciated view of Winnipeggers as consumers shopping for services from an administrative "board of directors" (i.e. city hall).



It may be a "confident and cool" city for those with the cash, but for many it would simply be perilous and cold. Sorry, Mr. Holle, but your high-performance Winnipeg sends shivers down my spine.

E-mail from PATRICK MCGUIRE in Winnipeg

A Conversation with Markus Buchart
October 24, 2006
Wood remains much cheaper than over-priced hydro, which we paid to build. Business gets hydro for as low as 2.5 cents, we pay 6.015 cents. How much do they sell our surplus for? All you want is more government revenue, to spend on things you have
not yet invented, I think you call them "programs." The best ad hocs for reducing power come from private affairs, [with] 90% reductions from the florescent light bulb and solid-state devices, all of which not one socialist policy ever encouraged. Manitoba Hydro's debt is about $6.8 billion, yet it "makes a profit." Odd. Please research and list this investment debt. Your article is written short.E-mail from Stan, Manitoba

The Wheat Board: To Vote or Not to Vote
October 22, 2006
Your conclusions re: the proposal that farmers should decide by plebiscite the future of the CWB monopoly are by and large correct.
The supporters of the CWB and its monopoly want a vote because, with help from the CWB, SARM, KAP APAS and the Saskatchewan and Manitoba governments, they are pretty sure they might win it. And derail the Conservative government's promise to implement choice.
The pro-choice folks don't want a vote because there is a risk they might lose it. And lose an opportunity to bring about change via the political process that has largely been without precedent.
The idea that a so-called majority of farmers can by plebiscite determine how the minority of farmers market their wheat and barley is simply ridiculous. Farmers on both sides of the debate, whether they acknowledge it or not, have quietly been making decisions on thier farms. To grow other crops, to increase livestock, to add enterprises, to generate other income, which all add up to reducing or eliminating their relationship with the CWB. In other words they are using their daily farming decisions to cast a vote in favor of choice.
If the CWB were eliminated tommorrow, most farmers would adapt in twenty-four hours. Many wouldn't even notice.
-E-mail from Keith Lewis, Wawota, Saskatchewan

Telecommuting Trumps the Planners
October 09, 2006
Your comments on telecommuting and its impact on urban development were very interesting. Personally, I have been telecommuting in my work since 1997. In the 1990’s, my location options were limited to urban areas. Since 2000, my options expanded to include rural communities. In 2001, I managed a $400,000 contract in the Caribbean when I was located in a medium-sized rural community in Manitoba.
Today, I live on a farm, and I can enjoy all the communication capacity that I could have located in the centre of Winnipeg. In the business world, I am as connected here as I would be living in downtown Toronto.
Why would I give up the fresh air, the space and most importantly, the personal safety of my present situation to live in central Winnipeg? More and more, people are going to get out of this hostile environment and chose to live in safe rural communities where they can participate in the knowledge economy.

- E-mail from rural Manitoba

Rethinking "power at cost" . . .
October 08, 2006
Excellent email. Keep up the excellent work. I just hope this material will at some point show up more in policy in this province. E-mail from Winnipeg

Death by Design
September 25, 2006
Winnipeg is unique in North America for a city its size in having no true freeways and has to rely on its arterial street system to do "dual duty".

You may already be aware of this but in case you aren't - the " no freeways in Winnipeg" policy was established by City Council in 1974 and has never been rescinded.

As a result, all transportation planning in Winnipeg since that time has been hamstrung.

While a few "freeway-like" facilities were built e.g, Bishop Grandin Blvd, Chief Peguis Trail, Charleswood Parkway, Route 90, all have at grade traffic signal control at the majority of their intersections and, as a result, all now have significant congestion at most of these intersections during peak traffic periods.

Winnipeg has been able to somewhat "manage" the situation up until now because of its relatively low growth rate over the last 30 years compared to cities like Calgary and Edmonton. However, with new residential areas such as Waverley West and Sage Creek coming on stream over the next 10-20 years there will be major challenges ahead for arterial streets such as Lagimodiere, Bishop Grandin and Route 90 to be able to accommodate the resulting traffic.

E-mail from Winnipeg

In the Fire at Ground Zero
August 31, 2006
I have had the honour of being acquainted with many former firefighters. The stories they have had to tell were eye-opening, to say the least. Many men who were homeless at the time I met them wanted the non-aboriginal peoples to know that they had contributed many years to working hard in Manitoba, be they pilots in remote communities, or firefighters. Your article certainly will aid in informing the general public of the respect and understanding deserved to those who have served Manitobans in the past, and those who continue to risk their lives to serve all of us now. E-mail from Diana Robbins, Winnipeg

  • Read Ms. Robbins’ entire letter . . .
  • Deal or No Deal?
    July 27, 2006
    Very well done on both the WTO and the CWB issues. You are bang on, on both. The WTO stuff is a real mess. Canadian agriculture is going to get sideswiped in a trade war that is already beginning. It is going to get rather ugly. E-mail from Winnipeg

    A Phony Study deludes . . .
    July 07, 2006

    Rolf Penner criticized Environmental Defence in his Free Press article regarding its publication "Polluted Children, Toxic Nation". In particular he described as "despicable" ED's report that childhood cancer in the US has increased by 21%. This Mr. Penner finds this a twisted statistic since childhood mortality from cancer (as stated in the same US report) has decreased by almost 50% in the same period, and this statistic was not in ED's report.



    Does Mr. Penner, therefore, believe that it is OK to get cancer ("a painful and deadly childhood affliction") as long as the cure rate approaches some reasonable number that satisfies the Frontier Centre's statistical targets?



    As long as children (and any other people) are getting cancer at higher rates, and as long as the cure rate is less than 100%, there is still plenty of pain and death to go around. E-Mail from C. Hugh Arklie, Winnipeg

    Aboriginal Governance Index
    July 06, 2006
    You and your colleagues are to be congratulated for the historic and heroic measurement of Band performance. My experience has been that the things that are measured get managed and your study, in my opinion, will be looked back at as the key turning point in the process of solving the problem of how first nations institutions fail first nations people. - Email from Michael Walker, Senior Fellow, Fraser Institute

    Pesticides are Designed to Kill Life
    June 24, 2006
    This is so vacuous it’s hilarious. Thanks for the smile!!! - Alex Avery, Director of Research, Center for Global Food Issues, Hudson Institute, Washington D.C.

    Grand Chief Ron Evans' responds to the Aboriginal Governance Index, and the Frontier Centre replies.
    June 20, 2006
    It is our position that this report clearly demonstrates an absolute lack of respect for the First Nations leadership by choosing not to discuss the purpose of the methodology of this research with any First Nations leaders or organizations beforehand to ensure that appropriate protocols would be followed or that useful questions would be asked. -Letter from Grand Chief Ron Evans

    Premiers take a stand . . .
    June 12, 2006
    I fully agree that Harper is pandering by supporting the anti-free trade, anti-sound economics, anti-social justice farm marketing boards. E-mail from William Johnson, Parliamentary Press Gallery, Ottawa

    Harper Panders on Trade
    June 01, 2006

    I just read your May 19 article in the Saskatoon Star phoenix, Harper sacrifices Canada’s farmers for political gain.. I agree wholeheartedly with your position and assessment of the Canadian negotiating position at WTO.



    One item you should consider, this is not the first time the Canadian intransigence on sensitive products has stalled negotiations. In the Hong Kong ministerial meeting in Dec. ’05, the Dec. 17 draft position paper included a formula for tariff reduction of sensitive products tied to the amount of increased in quota access. After the final late night negotiations and direct orders from the PMO, the formula was removed from the final text of Dec. 18. If Canada had not pulled the agreement off the table in Dec. there would have been a far more significant result from the Hong Kong meeting and much more progress would have been made on entire trade deal since then, but instead there has been no progress what so ever and Canada is maintaining an intransigent position.



    The same applies the CWB. Crawford Falconer, the chair of the Ag committee at the WTO as put out 2 position papers in May, both including an option to end the monopoly of state trading enterprises. He has left the door wide open for Canada to just walk through, he has pointed to the open door, he has given directions to the open door, he has begged, and Canada has done nothing. It defies comprehension. - E-mail from Doug McBain, Past President, Western Barley Growers Association

    Manitoba's Water Protection Act: Regulate First, Ask Questions Later
    May 22, 2006
    The Frontier Centre has also been quite vocal about this issue and we also owe them an expression of gratitude for investing their funds and time to research the science and policy options related to this issue. It is thanks to them that we gained the benefit of hearing the insights of leading scientists like Dr. Andrew Sharpley on this issue. They too have taken steps to ensure the urban audience is informed about this topic by publishing articles in the Free Press and conducting media interviews on radio stations such as CJRB and CBC. In my opinion, the Frontier Centre really lived up to its mission on this topic by providing an independent perspective on this public policy issue and ensuring people are informed about the facts and better alternatives. E-mail from Manitoba

    Winnipeg's History of Money Bylaws
    April 24, 2006
    Thank you for your article. Your website was also very helpful with both the adapted report version and the listing of bylaws from 1899 to 1968. E-mail from Gary McEwen, Winnipeg

    Manitoba's Water Regulations-Regulate First, Ask Questions Later
    April 13, 2006
    Well done on this – it is good information and extremely timely. E-mail from Winnipeg

    Manitoba's Water Regulations-Regulate First, Ask Questions Later
    April 13, 2006
    Well done on this – it is good information and extremely timely. E-mail from Winnipeg

    Phoenix Rising in Calgary?
    March 28, 2006
    I read your article in the Calgary Herald and was impressed with the explanation of ideas which could work in Calgary. We often ask what is a defining feature of Canadians. I think one is that whenever good ideas are put forward in Canada there seems to be a primeval need to show all the reasons why the idea wouldn't work, or ignore it totally. Email from Calgary

    Phoenix Rising in Calgary?
    March 20, 2006

    Your article is wonderful in its clarity of how things work and the devastation such preferences can create. Not all of Calgary’s aldermanic candidates are like the one we know. I have had some pretty creative talks with others and come away enlightened and unburdened. However, unfortunately, they do not represent the area I live in.



    I would also like to thank you for being so up front with your information. In this day and age one hears about being “politically correct,” which is really just a means of shutting up anyone in disagreement and who openly opposes what is being proposed. E-mail from Calgary


    Phoenix Rising in Calgary?
    March 19, 2006

    May I offer you my hearty congratulations on producing such a superbly-written article, which I have just read in today’s Calgary Herald. It hits just about every nail fairly and squarely right on the head.



    What would not work here in Calgary, however, is the notion of a “no-layoff” policy, as the levels of Municipal employment here are already way above any acceptable figures. Substantial City employee “surgery” would be necessary here, right from square one.

    E-mail from Calgary


    Cheaper Car Insurance?
    February 09, 2006
    If you really want to illustrate the price we pay for Autopac’s monopoly, I’d suggest you do a cross-country comparison of motorcycle insurance premiums similar to the one you did for car insurance. What we pay here is outrageous, and we average a 15% yearly increase. The PUB agrees, stating that Autopac’s method of calculating motorcyclists’ financial obligation is grossly unfair. Still no change though. E-mail from Winnipeg

    New Government in Ottawa Means Hope for First Nations
    February 01, 2006
    Mr. Sandberg,
    Just wanted to offer my support and agreement in regard to recent articles you have written for the Free Press pertaining to aboriginal policy.


    Two weeks ago I walked out of my job at INAC in the MB region, in large part for many of the reasons you have so eloquently stated in your articles. I could not stomach this system any longer. This was precipitated by a meeting I had with my manager the day before where I was delivered an edict to "reign myself in and check my philosophical differences at the door". In other words fall into line, keep your mouth shut and we don't want to hear any more of your ideas or potential solutions. I found this disgusting enough to make the following day my last as an INAC employee and probably the end of my 8-year career with the federal government--all in aboriginal-related positions.


    Yesterday I had an opportunity to visit a First Nation that I have not been to in 15 or 16 years and was not surprised to see that things were basically running as inefficiently as when I was last there and very little in the way of positive change had occurred especially in regard to socio-economic conditions. I blame the "system" for this lack of change. Given my experience working for regional and national aboriginal organizations, as well as three federal departments (in Winnipeg and Ottawa) in aboriginal portfolios and have come to the conclusion that your opinions are right on the mark. Keep up the good work and continue to fight the good fight!--E-mail from Winnipeg


    Interview with Dr. Mark Godley
    January 20, 2006
    Dr. Godley was fantastic! I think it was one of the best lunches I've been to. On a somewhat related note, some of the questions were around poaching of staff. My sister just graduated from Radiation Therapy. It's not MRI, but still somewhat related. She has to leave Manitoba to get a job because there are none here. Minister Sale keeps saying that they're understaffed and clinics like Dr. Godley's are making it worse by stealing staff. Yet all eight of the graduates from my sister's program have to leave Manitoba to find jobs. So our taxes are paying to train them, but because there's no jobs, they're leaving and going to work in other provinces while the government claims they're understaffed. Meanwhile, my sister says that cancer care is OVERSTAFFED for the equipment they have and they could run just as well, if not better, with half the staff... not because there's no demand, there's HUGE demand, but because there's a small, limited amount of equipment. - E-mail from Winnipeg

    Ag Vision Video Clip (Hi speed)
    January 19, 2006
    Rolf Penner thank you! I am a 25 year old farmer from Exeter Ontario. I could not agree with you more on the misguided and ignorant supply management system. What you said on Agvision was refreshing. Well spoken, well done. E-mail from Ontario

    On supply management . . .
    January 17, 2006
    Our opinions regarding trade barriers and subsidies have been shouted down at so many meetings over the years, that we don't have the heart to get involved in this type of debate anymore. Continued . . .

    Organic farmers sowing fear?
    January 11, 2006
    How disappointing to read that you invited Alex Avery to bring his opinions to Winnipeg. After looking at your website, I am surprised and deeply disturbed that you can pretend to be doing something good.

    I wonder, do you have children? Do you plan on ever having grandchildren? What sort of world are they going to inherit?

    Organic farming must be taking a bite out of someone's market share.

    E-mail from Glenda Whiteman, Concerned Residents of Winnipeg, Inc

    Allen Mills on Manitoba's "Perfect Calm"
    December 07, 2005
    Mills is right about the media and the politics of opposition. Other than your group, a fresh idea hasn't come out the political elite in Manitoba since the Red River Floodway was proposed. E-mail from Toronto

    High-Performance Cities show Calgary a Better Path
    November 28, 2005
    Peter Holle's column should be required reading for every taxpayer. The Washington Monument syndrome he describes was evident in just about every statement I heard by Mayor Dave Bronconnier during the debate. This was one of the most articulate commentaries I have read on the need for municipal government reform, and not just in Calgary. I hope we can look forward to more articles like it that not only help to
    identify root problems, but also offer practical suggestions for change for any leader bold enough to embrace them. - Stephen Pardy, Calgary

    Natural Gas Price Relief Ridiculed by Schreyer
    November 21, 2005

    "Peter Holle, president of the Frontier Centre, a private think tank most people would assume promotes free enterprise, opposes the NDP's natural gas program because it's not socialist enough. - Blog post from the Black Rod


    Read the Black Rod Post here



    Read our response . . .





    The True Cost of Fixing Natural Gas Prices
    November 18, 2005
    I just about fell out of my chair when I saw this the other day. Hydro is nothing more then a political tool being used by the government of the day. SELL IT before they completely destroy it! If I was Bob Brennan I would resign over this. - E-mail from Winnipeg

    The True Cost of Fixing Natural Gas Prices
    November 16, 2005
    Great publicity of the stupidity of subsidizing natural gas prices. - E-mail from Winnipeg

    Edmonton's High-Performance Public Schools
    November 07, 2005
    It's always flattering to learn that the neighbours are paying attention to you; however, Peter Holle's Oct. 30 column, “Edmonton lets principals run schools -- and it works,” comparing Edmonton Public and Winnipeg Public schools, does neither system a favour by undermining confidence in the performance of public schools and advocating for increased standardized testing. Letter to the Editor, Winnipeg Free Press

    An Environmental Policy for the 21st Century
    October 13, 2005
    I have just reviewed your paper on Smart and Green principles. I want to congratulate you for crafting such a thoughtful and intellectually-rigorous document. E-mail from Manitoba

    Smart and Green
    October 12, 2005
    Great article in Free Press re: "environment". You changed my perspective. E-mail from John Doole, Winnipeg

    Incentives or Regulations
    September 28, 2005
    The solutions for addressing sustainable rural development issues do not reside in urban ideals and utopian fantasies about how the countryside should be managed. The solution exists in the minds of the people who live and co-exist with our environment in rural areas. These people are the ones seeking to build a better future for their offspring, and they are best positioned to safeguard our future, not some urban idealist who has no clue about how the real world works. E-mail from Turtle Mountain, Manitoba

    Quebec's Margarine Madness
    September 27, 2005
    Good story on the ineptness of Quebec in dealing with margarine. Something about that place - free trade but only if it benefits us, equalization - but only if it benefits us. Please, please get off the pot and separate. - E-mail from Winnipeg

    Living in Interesting Energy Times
    September 14, 2005

    I continue to agree with your call for Manitoba to move toward market prices for electricity. This is a sensible policy that is endorsed internationally and I agree that it will accelerate efforts at conservation and alternative energy investment in the province.



    I still wish you would not talk about the windfall from energy falling into government hands on a continuing basis. You are falling for the big gov argument that this windfall is theirs.



    As an alternative, privatize Manitoba Hydro and give all of its shares to the current consumers. They will be the ones to feel the pain of increased costs and they will also be the ones to experience the increase income from converting Hydro for a cost-based utility to a profit maximizing company. This is the route to increasing public acceptance of your policy prescription.



    If government wants to “harvest” the benefits of this increased wealth, they have lots of instruments through sales taxes, income taxes etc. to recover this wealth.



    In the mean time, you have put money in the hands of private individuals and have gotten government out of the equation. That is the method to create real wealth and convert Manitoba to a have province.



    Raising rates to commercial rates and leaving the windfall in government hands is a sure way of perpetuating our perversely inefficient system. - E-mail from Manitoba


    A Year of Zero Tax Reductions
    August 26, 2005
    We have operated a small newspaper in a small town in Saskatchewan since 1969. Through that time I can honestly look back, and provide proof, that governments and taxes have been the worst enemy of my business the entire time. Rather than this situation improving, it has become more critical and is today a threat to the continued service of the business to the community.

    Further, we are one of the few businesses and individuals that are
    subjected to ALL tax laws and NO refunds, rebates, subsidies or deductions. I have tried to explain this at public political meetings, the local town councils and the local school division boards but as I look around the room I find I am the only one who could possibly comprehend the situation. Farmers, government employees, union members, seasonal workers who collect unemployment insurance, welfare families, new Canadians, etc.

    Then there's myself who goes to work every day, makes just enough money so he doesn't qualify for anything - GST refunds, student loans for his children, tax refunds for medical bills, fuel subsidies, etc. etc. - even our MLA and our MP do not understand the situation because they are both farmers. I started to work at this business in 1959 when I was 12 years old and was forced by the government to pay unemployment insurance. My employer contact the UI dept. and was told that I could not collect any UI until I was sixteen years old but I still had to pay into the system. I am trying real hard not be a whiner, but at 58 years old, I am getting real tired of my monthly income disappearing at an increasing rate every year and watching governments become more inefficient.

    This is not the way to build a happy, efficient work force in Canada,
    Saskatchewan, or in our little community.

    E-mail from Saskatchewan

    Does PM Want to End Native Poverty?
    August 25, 2005
    I read your article in the Winnipeg Free Press today and I must say I agree with most of it. Cow-towing to the corrupt aboriginal elite does nothing for the rank and file, and is in the end, nothing but low-life politics. Clearly the status quo is not acceptable, changes need to be made, and people made accountable. It will take a courageous leader to do this, and hopefully one will emerge. It would be helpful if it came from the aboriginal population itself... E-mail from Manitoba

    Does PM Want to End Native Poverty?
    August 25, 2005

    Dear Mr. Sandberg: I have to say, kudos to you for being so honest regarding the new ideas by the Liberals to pour money down the drain.



    I used to work as a probation officer and I saw first hand how money is abused. Your right, the money gets to the reserves and the leaders spend it on themselves, their family and friends and everyone else suffers. It made me sick to my stomach and I was so glad when Robert Nault was trying to change things... then it all collapsed and my hope for accountability was gone because I agree with you 100%, the leaders are the reason their communities are poor.



    It just made me ill.... and if someone was doing their job i.e. keeping in budget and had money in their account, the leaders help themselves to it without asking.



    I am currently at another reserve and its very similar, the Chief is always gone (in the cities, hanging at the fancy restraints, casinos, bars) while the community is left to deal with whatever misfortunate is going on i.e. sexual assaults, spousal assaults (all deemed as every day regular occurrences and don't warrant the chiefs presence) he may show up for a suicide if its a friend or relative.



    I have worked in the correctional system, the court system and its all the same, its everybody else's fault, never those that are actually accountable "the leaders of their communities", we cannot heal other peoples back yards, they have to do it themselves and your right, money is not the answer, unless it is used for its intent over a long period of time.



    Anyway, I am always angry when I hear so much about how the white man does this and that and its their fault because what I have seen, is this: The white man isn't around to abuse anymore, natives are harming each other, they are full of hate, jealousy and negativity because their leaders aren't doing what they are supposed to be doing, taking care of their issues and their people.



    So, what can we do about it? E-mail from Manitoba

    Does PM Want to End Native Poverty?
    August 25, 2005
    Dear Mr. Sandberg:

    I have to say, kudos to you for being so honest regarding the new ideas by the Liberals to pour money down the drain.

    I used to work as a probation officer and I saw first hand how money is abused. Your right, the money gets to the reserves and the leaders spend it on themselves, their family and friends and everyone else suffers. It made me sick to my stomach and I was so glad when Robert Nault was trying to change things... then it all collapsed and my hope for accountability was gone because I agree with you 100%, the leaders are the reason their communities are poor.

    It just made me ill.... and if someone was doing their job i.e. keeping in budget and had money in their account, the leaders help themselves to it without asking.

    I am currently at another reserve and its very similar, the Chief is always gone (in the cities, hanging at the fancy restraints, casinos, bars) while the community is left to deal with whatever misfortunate is going on i.e. sexual assaults, spousal assaults (all deemed as every day regular occurrences and don't warrant the chiefs presence) he may show up for a suicide if its a friend or relative.

    I have worked in the correctional system, the court system and its all the same, its everybody else's fault, never those that are actually accountable "the leaders of their communities", we cannot heal other peoples back yards, they have to do it themselves and your right, money is not the answer, unless it is used for its intent over a long period of time.

    Anyway, I am always angry when I hear so much about how the white man does this and that and its their fault because what I have seen, is this: The white man isn't around to abuse anymore, natives are harming each other, they are full of hate, jealousy and negativity because their leaders aren't doing what they are supposed to be doing, taking care of their issues and their people.

    So, what can we do about it? E-mail from Manitoba

    What do you people think of Stephen Harper's idea of giving people a tax credit to take the bus? E-mail from W Borkowski, Tyndall, Manitoba
    August 18, 2005

    It's not a new idea or a bad one. It addresses one of Frontier's three themes of high performance public policy - neutrality. Automobiles and parking fees are a recognized expense for tax purposes - it is not unreasonable to hold the same for transit passes.



    Mass transit remains a declining transport mode as urban areas disperse naturally due to rising incomes and changing living, work and shopping patterns. The internet allows many to work from home. Companies locate their facilities on less expensive suburban land away from bus routes. We don't find cheap and convenient big box stores on expensive downtown land. Thus, less so in the most congested cities like Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, transit will continue to decline and a small tax writeoff will make little difference.



    Mr. Harper might get more traction by offering to simply transfer gas tax revenues to the provinces and allowing them to make their own choices. Ontario and B.C. might then choose to put the monies disproportionately into mass transit infrastructure. For places like Manitoba and other small provinces the money would go into under capitalized road systems that need upgrading and repair.



    Shrink Waiting Lists the British Way
    August 14, 2005
    With reference to the UK medical system, there is a real crisis at the moment, the same one as here - most of our promising medical students, and theirs, want to specialize and thus progress into Residency. This results in a lack of GPs and how sad it is that a GP is almost looked upon as being "bottom of the pile," these days, prestige wise.Really sad to say, but very few patients have a GP who actually "knows them" and how they tick. At walk in clinics you are liable to get a different doctor each time. The other problem is, and this is the one the UK faces, there is not enough room in the hospitals for all the Specialists. They cannot get "hospital time," as it is called. Many doctors in the UK are facing unemployment and having to go to other countries to practice. I don't know but perhaps we have the same situation, here. - E mail from Robert Kirkpatrick, Winnipeg

    Shrink Waiting Lists the British Way
    August 14, 2005
    The Canadian Way is to simply eliminate the patients ... like Mr. Kelly in the recent BCTV story.

    Note that the spokesman for our Circus Maximus public health administration said nothing to BCTV about objective, measurable STANDARDS for public health in Canada, the standards which would have saved Mr. Kelly's life and other lives.

    Prime Minister Martin has NO commitment to such standards. Ask him. -E mail from B.C.

    A Reserve Torn Apart
    July 13, 2005
    The debate we need is how we can change our power structure in order to have some grass-roots accountability. A close look at the American system would be a good place to start. Email from Alberta

    Where are the Champions of Free Trade?
    June 30, 2005
    It is absolutely not the position of the Conservative Party that the Government of Canada leave the WTO negotiations if over quota tariffs on sensitive products are reduced. There is far too much at stake for Canada’s negotiators to leave the table without achieving the fundamental goals of the negotiations. For the sake of our country’s agricultural producers, we need to get a deal in this round, but we ca