Then you better upgrade the village facilities to something from this century.
What are you on about? The facility is fine where it is. It is ideally located. Why do you think so many nations operate atmospheric research facilities in polar regions? It's not because of the balmy weather, it is because they are ideally situated. Three kilometers is not far enough when you're looking at aerosols in the atmosphere. Some days in PEI I can smell the smoke from a pulp mill on the Southern Northumberland Straight coast in Nova Scotia, and my nose is far less sensitive than the equipment they operate in these research stations.
My point was moving it to a place people already live at. that cuts the expenses (getting things there and then back out again), the $1.5M better not be the ****ing wages alone for a handful of people.
It's 15 kilometers from Eureka. There are people there year round. $1.5 million is operating expenses...how do you figure that is only salary? That makes even less sense than your other posts...
I only questioned the spending on the basis of are we getting value for the money or are we just creating government jobs? Ton came up with enough good reasons to persuade me that it should be kept. At least for now. Actually I am fairly impressed that this facility can be runby a government department for a million bucks a year. Unless there are hidden costs in some other budget.
Yes, it's like I said earlier, the baseline funds keep the facility operating, and that allows more funds for research to flow through. For instance check out these numbers from
one of the researchers who uses this facility:
Project: The Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory
Institution: University of Toronto
Research Sector: Environment
Principal Investigator: James Drummond
Trust Investment: $1,807,730
ORF Investment: $815,590
CFI Investment: $3,293,176
Total research investment from all sources: $8,721,306
Other funding comes from:
- Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
- Environment Canada
- Canada Foundation for Innovation
- Ontario Innovation Trust
- Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation
- Nova Scotia Research and Innovation Trust
- Canadian Space Agency
- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) - Study of Environmental Arctic Change program
- Government of Canada - International Polar Year program
- University of Toronto Centre for Global Change Science
- Indian and Northern Affairs Canada - Northern Scientific Training Program
- Polar Continental Shelf Project
- Nunavut Research Institute