Stephen Kimber

Stephen Kimber is the Rogers Communications Chair in Journalism at the University of King's College in Halifax. He is an award-winning writer, editor and broadcaster.

His writing has appeared in almost all major Canadian publications including Canadian Geographic, Financial Post Magazine, Maclean's, En Route, Chatelaine, Financial Times, the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star and the National Post. He has written one novel — Reparations — and six non-fiction books. Website: http://www.stephenkimber.com.

Sep 242012
 

Huge loans and major union concessions save about 700 jobs — for now.

by Stephen Kimber

I have rewritten this column three times in the past three days as the on, then off, then on-again deal to re-start the NewPage paper mill in Point Tupper played itself out in after-hours news releases and hastily convened press conferences. But my essential question hasn’t changed.

How much is more than too much? It’s far from the first time Nova Scotia governments have — or should have — smacked up against that question.

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Sep 182012
 

Polls show voters want to change more than just the name.

by Stephen Kimber

When someone asks where you’re from, do you say, “I am a proud citizen of the Halifax… Regional… Municipality…”Or do you acronym-ize your place of residence as something called H-R-M?

 

Or perhaps humanize it as HeRM?

Uh… Unlikely on all counts.

Most of us — especially when speaking to outsiders — probably say we’re from Halifax. If we’re being more particular or talking among ourselves, we employ the traditional pre-amalgamation names for our communities: Dartmouth, Bedford, Moose River, etc.

So it’s no surprise Corporate Research Associates’ latest Halifax Urban Report finds 56 per cent of us (margin of error: 4.8 per cent) favouring changing the clunky by-committee name of our geographic entity to the “City of Halifax.”

More than half of us — 54 per cent yes, 37 per cent no — want to re-redivide HRM back into one city and one county.

Support was unsurprisingly strongest (62 per cent) among those who lived in the city formerly known as Halifax and considerably weaker (49 per cent) among the still-resentful citizens of what was, before the 1996 amalgamation, the proud sort-of city of Dartmouth, not to forget in all those far-flung outposts the pollsters lump together as “Other HRM.”

While such a name change would be welcomed, relatively easy and inexpensive — new stationery, a little legislative search-and-replace — talking about changing the name begs the far more challenging, conundrum question: What do the residents of Uniacke Square and Musquodoboit Harbour have in common and why are they part of the same municipality?

When the provincial government of the day shoe-horned 200 communities from Necum Teuch to Hubbards — spread out over a land mass the size of Prince Edward Island with local economies based on everything from hunting moose to selling Moosehead beer to college students — into one municipality, the idea was to save money and end the wasteful competition for economic development, especially among the larger units.

But the result has been an unwieldy agglomeration of urban and rural interests that have never connected.

According to the same poll, more than half of us — 54 per cent yes, 37 per cent no — want to re-redivide HRM back into one city and one county.

This is the time to ask: Where do our now too-many-to-count-on-the-fingers-of-one-hand mayoralty candidates stand on the issue? And what, if anything would they do to fix it?

 

 

 

 

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Sep 032012
 

Readers respond vigorously to column about electoral boundaries.

by Stephen Kimber

We are at the drain end of August when the non-news of summer just repeats itself.  Mayor Peter Kelly still refuses to rule out running for his old Bedford council seat; Lance Armstrong still proclaims his innocence; Conrad Black still wants his day in court. Wisely, no one pays any mind. So I was surprised last week when a column I wrote about that most seemingly esoteric of subjects — electoral boundaries — roused such passion.?  I've had online comments, Facebook postings, emails, phone calls, even supermarket line-up upbraidings…

My argument, simply put: the provincial government’s decision to order the supposedly independent electoral boundaries commission to come to a pre-determined conclusion to eliminate so-called protected ridings was an affront to the democratic process.

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Aug 222012
 

Electoral boundaries commissioners being used as political cover.

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

You could be forgiven for assuming Nova Scotia Justice Minister Ross Landry actually believes in the democratic process.

"It's very important that we look at our demographic structure in Nova Scotia… and how we get fairness and equity into the system," he told reporters last week as his government-appointed, government-instructed "independent" electoral boundaries commission wrapped up public hearings on his government-ordered, revised second edition of its first rejected interim report.

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Aug 082012
 

Former NS Cabinet minister mishandled $25,000.

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

You could — in a law-school-essay, sentencing-guidelines way — justify Justice David MacAdam's decision to sentence disgraced former MLA Richard Hurlburt to house arrest instead of clapping him off to jail. But not in the real world. Richard Hurlburt repeatedly violated the trust of his electors while bilking taxpayers of more than $25,000, and then attempted to justify his actions — until the truth trapped him.

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Jul 272012
 

Summer silly season turns every announcement into an omen.

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

You know you must be heading into the silly, nothing-better-to-write-about summer season in politics — not to mention in the shelf life of any government — when commentators begin to twist every announcement, pronouncement, silence, head nod, eyebrow raise and weather report into an earnest discussion of whether said announcement, pronouncement, etc, increases or decreases the likelihood of a provincial election tomorrow. Spoiler alert.

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Jul 232012
 

Change the contract, change the Halifax City council.

What are we to make of the latest tongue-clucking, finger-pointing, eye-rolling, so's-your-old-lady response to last week's auditor general's report on the ongoing, never-ending screw-ups at the intersection of Halifax Regional Municipality, Metro Centre and Trade Centre Ltd?

Following up on last year's cash-for-concerts scandal — let's not revisit that — Halifax A-G Larry Munroe discovered a murky, virtually undocumented 2006 deal in which the provincially-operated Trade Centre hijacked Metro Centre's box office operations.

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Jul 112012
 

Stephen Harper's policies backhand people of Atlantic region.

Forget for an instant Newfoundland's oil and gas gushers, which have transformed that perennial tail-of-the-dog province into one of Canada's "haves." Set aside Nova Scotia's shimmering, ships-yet-to-be-built contracts that are supposed to pave our yellow brick road to the future. And ignore as well, at least for the moment, that it is summer, the very best of times in Atlantic Canada — certainly not a time to be contemplating That Question. That Question, as posed recently by Peter McKenna, the chair of the Political Science Department at the University of Prince Edward Island, is simply this: "Has the Harper government placed Atlantic Canada in its crosshairs?"

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Jun 202012
 

Could a secret handshake be keeping him in power?

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

Why is Peter MacKay still in the federal cabinet? I mean, really.

Let us traipse through the potato patch of what should have been the meteoric down and down, and down some more career trajectory of our man in Ottawa, a man most famous for his love life, his entitled-to-his-entitlements adventures on our dime and his — let's be kind — fudged public pronouncements.

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