Direct access mp3 http://ow.ly/1Lf9O #Iqaluit fire chief expresses concerns about conditions in a local jail, he's summarily fired #Nunavut
http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/asithappens_20100513_32323.mp3
or via
http://www.cbc.ca/podcasting/pastpodcasts.html?2#ref2
See also
Ex-fire marshal's #Nunavut jail complaints http://ow.ly/1Lam9 no "...other prison having fallen so short of legal standards..."
#Nunatsiaq News- NEWS: Nunavut dismisses whistle-blowing fire marshal: Updated May 12, 11:50 a.m. The Government ... http://bit.ly/ckeEJ4
[excerpt]
Nunavut dismisses whistle-blowing fire marshal
"I didn't expect to come back to Canada and get shot in the back by our own politicians"
CHRIS WINDEYERUpdated May 12, 5:57 p.m.
Nunavut's former fire marshal, Tony Noakes Jr., was fired for asking too many questions about the safety of numerous buildings in the territory, including the Baffin Correctional Centre, he said in an interview May 12.
"I was told, 'you'll be fired,'" Noakes said.
Noakes said officials with the Department of Community and Government Services, which oversees the fire marshal's office, didn't like that he'd been asking about what would happen if he ordered BCC closed while fire hazards were fixed.
That prediction came true May 11, after Noakes gave information about BCC to the RCMP May 7. exactly one year after he took the fire marshal's job.
He was still on probation as a new hire, which made it easy for the GN to dump him. A letter from the Department of Human resources said the decision to terminate Noake's employment was approved by Kathleen Lausman, the deputy minister of the CGS department.
But Noakes said that as fire marshal, he held the authority — and the duty — to act on numerous safety problems at the jail, including a faulty fire suppression system in the kitchen, problems with electrical boxes and BCC's notorious overcrowding problem.
Last week, Nunatsiaq News reported that BCC housed a record high number of inmates, 102. The building was built to house about 48 inmates and crams extra prisoners into cells and the centre's gymnasium.
RCMP Chief Superintendent Steve McVarnock said he received a complaint from Noakes this past Friday. McVarnock said the matter has been assigned to an investigator, who will review it before deciding whether to launch an investigation.
"He mentioned he's done some fire marshal related activity that had caused him some concern and obviously he was not happy with the response he got from his higher[-ups] and he believes there may be some criminal consequences," McVarnock said Wednesday.