The Beacon, 24 April 2006
In this edition of The Beacon there's news on the catastrophic gap in drug coverage; a new paper that shows aquaculture is FARMING, not fishing; and a lesson in resource revenue economics.
Moving beyond the rotary phone
The methods of interpersonal communication have changed dramatically in the past decade or two. From that one black rotary telephone that sat in a central location in the home, to the world of wireless, digital communication that includes text, audio and video. In this column, AIMS president Brian Lee Crowley points out Canada needs to regulate for the times, not the bygone ages.
Meet Canada’s Site-Based Guru
As he has done in Washington, Boston, Kansas City and Sacremento, Angus McBeath took Colorado Springs by storm. The AIMS Fellow for Public Education Reform explained that what Edmonton did to improve its schools, can be done anywhere in North America. This article provides a taste of the lesson.
The meaning of Ralph
When oil prices were in the basement, Ralph Klein was hot. Now that oil prices are hot, the Alberta premier's popularity is waning. In this article, AIMS president Brian Lee Crowley uses the story of Ralph in a tale of resource revenue economics. Links to other AIMS work on resource revenues are included at the end of the article.
It is FARMING, not Fishing
Re-thinking how we view Canada’s aquaculture industry
It is FARMING, not Fishing
Author Robin Neill, professor of Economics at UPEI, examines the bureaucracy surrounding the aquaculture industry in Canada and calls for a fundamental reorientation. In "It is FARMING, not Fishing", Neill concludes aquaculture needs to be separated from the administration of the wild fishery, which means taking it out of the jurisdiction of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO).