Iqaluit drivers are notorious for turning a blind eye to such fool notions as yielding to pedestrians in crosswalks and not parking across someone's driveway. So the City Council had the brilliant idea of enacting the Traffic, Parking, and Walkways By-law. The by-law passed first reading at a meeting last November and, because this is such a momentous change, the city is planning a public consultation.
The city of Iqaluit, in an effort to bring some order to its chaotic streets, is introducing fines for traffic and safety violations.The city's proposed traffic, parking and walkways bylaw introduces such concepts as not parking at an intersection, stopping at crosswalks, and not driving on pedestrian walkways.
It also requires residents to park in designated parking areas, not in front of people's driveways, and to back into the back-in parking stalls.
That sounds pretty radical. Some are wondering whether Iqaluit drivers can make the adjustment. City councillor Claude Martel:
"Nobody in this town stops at stop sign, so they don't even stop for crosswalk people, they don't. I've seen it and I'm sure you [see it], he says. So how are they going to enforce that when they only have two enforce[ment officers] for the whole town?"
Iqaluit has experienced significant growth since becoming capital of the new territory of Nunavut in 1999. The streets were not even named until 2002. (UPDATE: That final sentence is not accurate, says Prairie Words in the comments.)









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Not true, the streets were named even back in the 70’s. One was named after the Queen after a visit. They were not used on signs but were in place on the town map. The fact that a numbering plan used by the NWT, DPW and the Housing Association resulted in multiplicity of sequential numbers being assigned streets were never numbered ’southern style” And if a house was moved, the number went with it. So between row housing, the high rise, DPW and FBHA there could be 4 places all with the same number.
Thanks, Prairie Words. I heard that from a colleague in Yellowknife who had visited Iqaluit several times, so I assumed his information was correct. I’ve never been there.
Driving a taxi cab in Iqaluit sounds like a real challenge.