Canada – After the storm
By Stabroek News – January 4, 2014 Editorial |
Four days ago the temperature in Winnipeg fell to -31°C (with a mind-numbing -48°C wind chill), the city’s coldest day in 80 years and colder than surface temperatures at the North Pole and on Mars, according to the Manitoba Museum. The chill extended further east; parts of northern Quebec felt wind chills of -56°C, and dozens of cars crashed on the icy surface of Toronto’s QEW highway. Early in the New Year the Greater Toronto Area was still recovering from a pre-Christmas ice-storm (similar to the one descending on New York yesterday), which left 350,000 people without power and coated the city’s trees, roads and driveways with a skin of ice up to an inch thick.
Anyone reading about this while relaxing in warmth of the tropics must shake their head at the northern Stoics who can endure such trials with little more than a shrug.
The author Margaret Atwood once suggested that the broad stereotype of Canada’s national character – its notorious reticence and unassuming tolerance – was the product of generations of immigrants coming to terms with unforgiving landscapes and harsh weather. (It has been said, with some justice, that Ontario has only two seasons: Winter and July.)
What the reports leave out, however, is how well places like Winnipeg, Quebec and Toronto still function during these frigid interludes. Yes, there are fallen trees, frozen roads and power outages, but these are removed, de-iced and restored, often within a day or two. During the coldest weather, shops remain open and buses, trains and streetcars keep running. Thousands of young children attend indoor soccer practices and little league hockey games; families swim at public pools, or escape on the country’s many highways for a day of skiing. The infrastructure that allows this to happen is so engrained in daily life that most metropolitan Canadians take it for granted.
Bad weather also brings out the best in some communities. During the power outages, many Ontarians decamped to the houses of friends or family members whose homes still had electricity. Others visited publicly funded shelters that offered food and warmth. Conditions were far from ideal, but they did not descend into the chaos that has occurred elsewhere. If one recalls the US government’s response to hurricane Katrina, or Caricom’s slow, inadequate gestures in the wake of the Port-au-Prince earthquake, the efficiency that prevails in places like Winnipeg and Toronto during these crises appears even more impressive.
It is humbling to compare the businesslike manner with these cities confront crises that would overwhelm us in Georgetown. We hesitate for months over the right way to repair City Hall, but in a few days they scrape and salt hundreds of miles of highways and repair fallen power lines in sub-zero weather. Even with all the graft that has come to light – at all levels of government – in places like Ontario, they can still deal with crises quickly and calmly. As we enter another year, one likely to present us with different but no less serious weather-related challenges, wouldn’t it be nice if our bureaucrats learned a few lessons from their northern counterparts?
URL to article: http://www.stabroeknews.com/2014/opinion/editorial/01/04/storm/

Comments
As far as I’m concerned it’s not about learning from our Northern counterparts, it’s about the commitment of the government(s) towards the betterment of Guyana. Knowledge means absolutely nothing without commitment and therein lies the woes of the country.
Instead of looking to CAN USA UK for comparisions maybe Guyana should look closer to home ….SURINAME BRAZIL VENEZUELA …..in this respect.
Guyana s future is closer home influenced by what happens worldwide.
Start seeing the forrest not trees and leaves…..literally as their future.
The next generations of Guyanese is the future ….the status quo in politricks
will have to listen or be de-selected.
I remain optimistic ! as ever.
Kamptan
Guyana is the most beautiful country,in the past 54 years, i have not seen any of our resources in operation…we have electric, gold.. sugar ..bauxite.. get it working its time…start looking for outside help, for the next generations, stop thinking for yourself….the word is share……
Joan
Your comments are packed with emotion and love for your country and its peoples….in simple language …you speak from your heart and think with your soul…I salute your “voice in the wilderness” voice of true love for your country
and its beauty. Congratulations.
In 60s 70s 80s we experienced some radical thinking in education…which
stirred the imagination of our youthful thinkings of the times.
Then followed the 90 s and 2000 s with the end of the cold war
and start of the WARS of intervention….”illegal” wars.
Both periods of WAR were post WW1 and WW2….
It was the nuclear deterant that saved us from WW3.
My wish,my dream, is for a WW3…
WAR on poverty……not by military intervention…but by radical
changes in our education of our youths…citizens of tomorrow…
Guyana may be classified as “poor” by western standards but it is
“rich” by eastern standards…..described as east/west detante…
Capitalism V Communism….
Today we have Socialism V Communism
described as capitalism with a conscience.
Tomorrow it will be Realism V Materialism or whatever other isms that follow
What the world needs is love sweet love ….the love of caring and sharing….
there is certainly more joy in giving than receiving….
Once again thanks for your emotive words above….of pride and passion.
Peace and love
Kamptan