CKLB joins Ulukhaktok community station

The community hall in Ulukhaktok. (CKLB files)

The community of Ulukhaktok has another addition to its community radio station.

CKLB will now be the second radio station broadcast in the community.

The station serves about 400 listeners community-wide.

“Our elders depend on the radio,” says Derek Squirrel, recreational coordinator for Ulukhaktok.

Robert Catana, Elder, and former radio host says the radio is a very powerful tool.

“It’s beneficial for all of us to have that kind of radio station. To be comfortable knowing its an aboriginal radio, we are at ease,” Catana says.

Radio is important for the purposes of education, Catana says, because our languages and stories are not being taught in schools.

“We are forgetting our culture,” he adds.

CKLB radio invested $3,000 on the project, with radio upgrades, antennas, and installation, among other things.

The extra money will be used to purchase computers and battery backups, says Squirrel.

Due to “broken communication and a change in technicians”, he adds, the project took a year to complete.

CKLB is looking to add an official language speaker in Inuvialuktun to the broadcast for the Ulu people.

CKLB has been active in the community since Monday night.

About the Author

Mariah Caruso
Mariah Caruso is a digital journalist, originally from Toronto, Canada. She graduated from the University of Toronto with a Hons. Bachelor of Arts and completed her Journalism post-grad at Sheridan College. She has an insatiable appetite for life, storytelling, connecting to the people, and getting to the heart of the issue. On her spare time, you can find her at your local coffee shop writing songs, poetry and prose or at the gym out-lifting men. If you have a story idea, feel free to send her an email at mariah.caruso@cklbradio.com or call 867-766-2552 Ext 108