I have been recommending the
establishment of something like a Northern Policy Institute (NPI)
since I was a little boy in short pants. One of the extraordinary
gaps in Northern Ontario has been the inability to think
constructively and intelligently about its condition.
I have always thought the institution
should be funded by Northern institutions such as the Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM), individual towns and cities,
our universities, labour organizations, First Nations groups and
interested and relatively selfless private sector supporters.
The reason is simple. He who pays the
shot determines the outcome. Northern Ontario has many structural and
systemic problems. Many of these problems have to do with governance
(i.e. taxation, resource policy, expenditure priorities,
environmental laws, energy strategy, the general disconnect and
dysfunction between federal and provincial initiative in the area,
etc.). It is unlikely, although to be fair, not impossible, that a
provincially funded research council will be contemplating research
projects that promise to get it into the murky waters of challenging
the status quo.
Another reason to pay the bill
ourselves in Northern Ontario is that for the most part our
institutions endure but provincial governments change and with them
policies and priorities. The institute could be gone in a New York
minute like, say, the Smart Cities initiative with a change in
political leadership.
Finally, the country is not
progressing. We are falling back in competitiveness, job creation,
wealth generation and innovation. Northern Ontario can lead the
province and the country with innovative regional strategies. It
isn’t that hard in this country.
That said, I’m pleased the provincial
government has kept its promise to proceed with the Northern Policy
Institute. If FONOM or others thought the idea important they could
have done it years ago, as could the rest of the organizations I
mentioned. The truth is it would never have happened without the
province's leadership. The resources are limited to be sure ($1
million a year for five years), about the equivalent of redoing a
couple of sidewalks a year, but it is a beginning.
Ministers Rick Bartolucci and Michael
Gravelle deserve credit for seeing this through during extremely
tight spending times. It was wise to involve the presidents of
Laurentian and Lakehead Universities to spearhead startup and
oversight. It is important to separate this institution from
government influence and the risk-averse government ministries that
are locked into their own view of the world and operational
imperatives. Governments massage virtually all information they
produce for their benefit. Research must be independent to be useful
or it will bring no real benefit.
We live in absurd times. Last week the
treasurer for Alberta warned that his province could experience up to
a $3-billion deficit because the price of oil was down. The stupidity
of trying to run a government on commodity prices blows the mind in
this day and age. That province has been through ups and downs for
years and you would have thought they might have learned a lesson or
two. They have not. They think they are smart because they are rich.
They will not be rich for long and
neither will we (Ring of Fire or not) if we do not find the resolve
to be focused on sustainability and not just exploitation and
profitability.
Hope springs eternal. The first act of
maturity for any political or economic entity is to commit to
accountability. Thoughtful accountability. This is a first step.
Here is what NPI said of its mandate:
"To develop and promote proactive, evidence-based and
purpose-driven policy options that deepen understanding about the
unique challenges and opportunities of Northern Ontario and advance
the sustainable development and long-term economic prosperity of
Northern Ontario.”
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
Here is the litmus test. This adventure
will be overseen by the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines.
If this tiny investment in critical thinking doesn’t make them
nervous it will be a failure.We’ll see.