Community Profile
Introduction
Welcome to
the Big Land, a vast, friendly place with tremendous promise and
opportunity. Trophy- sized fish, giant caribou herds, world-class
wilderness country, vast hydro, mineral and timber resources are
all standard fare here. These and other assets provide the Town of
Happy Valley-Goose Bay with a very attractive combination of
opportunities for business growth and a quality of lifestyle
opportunities unmatched anywhere.
We are a "Can Do"
community of nearly 9,000 people, where new business opportunities
are never far away. Our entrepreneurs are taking on new challenges
and partnering opportunities every day. Our people have a diverse
mix of Aboriginal, European and other origins; collectively they
have built a community with a positive, business friendly attitude
and a vibrant arts and culture sector.
We are
strategically located with respect to global air routes that led
to our origin as an aircraft base during World War II. Today,
Goose Bay Airport is on the official NASA list of alternate
Shuttle landing sites due to the quality of its infrastructure and
prevailing weather conditions. Canadian Forces Base 5 Wing Goose
Bay is a well established location for Low Level Flight Training
by a number of Air Forces for the same reasons.
Access to
North American markets has been greatly via the Trans Labrador
Highway. This all season road connects us to Central North
America. We are 1304 kilometers by air and 1838 kilometers by road
northeast of Montreal.
Happy Valley-Goose Bay is a regional
service centre for the communities of coastal Labrador and a
variety of industrial activities throughout the region. It is a
strategic location for mining exploration and development in
central and eastern Labrador, including the giant Voisey's Bay
development and the Lower Churchill Hydro projects.
These
are some of the reasons why we say that Happy Valley-Goose Bay is
"A Bright Light in Canada's North". If you are interested in
exploring business opportunities in the Big Land, we would like to
discuss them with you.
Our Quality
of Life
Ours is a strong, progressive community
with a frontier spirit. While we look to the future, we are
grounded in our origins. The celebration of our cultural and
natural heritage takes many forms, including the annual Creative
Arts Festival, the Labrador Canoe Regatta, theatrical offerings by
the Mokami Players, Them Days (the Labrador cultural magazine),
and a rich assortment of locally produced crafts.
Our
schools offer high quality programs, including French Immersion
and French First Language programs and language maintenance for
the children of our visiting German Air Force personnel. The
Health Labrador Corporation administers the Melville Hospital, a
teaching hospital. It is a regional facility serving central and
coastal Labrador. The Paddon Memorial Home is the regional seniors
facility.
Happy Valley-Goose Bay has modern facilities
catering to a full range of recreation and athletic activities for
both winter and summer. The unspoiled wilderness environment at
our back door stretches for hundreds of kilometers in every
direction and offers countless opportunities for world class
hunting, fishing, photography, canoeing and snowmobiling in
winter, just to name a few of the activities popular within the
region.
We have a good supply of affordable building lots
and existing housing. Serviced lots cost, on average,
approximately $30,00.00 and single detached housing sells in the
region of $100,000.00. The Town is actively working to ensure that
a steady supply of high quality housing lots are available to meet
the demands of the future. If you are looking for more information
on housing, feel free to contact us at your
convenience.
The Town also offers the most extensive range
of commercial services in Labrador, including government support
agencies, training and professional support services. There is a
ready supply of competitively priced commercial and industrial
land available in our industrial park and in smaller lots located
in business areas. Happy Valley-Goose Bay is a gateway to the
North. It is the transportation hub of Labrador; the only location
where road, sea and air services all come together with a quality
infrastructure.
Our
People
Our population is comparatively young,
with 42% under 25 years of age, compared to 36% for the province.
We have a diverse mix of cultural backgrounds including European
settler, Aboriginal (Inuit and Innu) and Métis. We offer employers
a stable, adaptable and motivated workforce, skilled in the
management and technical operation of a major airbase, the many
private sector operations supplying it along with the mining,
tourism and other industries. A diverse mix of other management
and operational skills are also employed in the delivery of
regional services to central and coastal Labrador.
Training
and education levels are very competitive. 30.5% of the population
fifteen years of age and over have either a postsecondary degree
or certificate compared, for example, to 30.9% for the capital
city of St. John's and 26.4% for Corner Brook.
The
Labrador Institute of Memorial University, located in Happy
Valley-Goose Bay, is responsible for maintaining communication
between Labrador and the university campuses in St. John's and
Corner Brook, identifying research and education requirements
within Labrador and the resources to meet them. Through the
University's Distance Education Program, residents can access
diverse continuing education programs, including degree credit
courses and certificate programs. There are currently several
courses offered with World Wide Web components and 30 additional
courses are currently being developed for this medium.
The
Happy Valley campus of the College of the North Atlantic
accommodates approximately 200 full-time students and offers 14
certificate and diploma courses. Other programs are customized for
industry, aboriginal and community groups, with an emphasis on
flexibility and responsiveness to the marketplace. Priority is
placed on graduate placement, with a full-time placement officer.
There is a very healthy
entrepreneurial spirit abroad in the town,with a significant
number of business startups/expansions each year. Home-based
business startups, for example, have blossomed from just a few per
year to a total of 62 during 1996 and 1997.
Our International Connections
A
gateway to the North, Happy Valley-Goose Bay is strategically
located with respect to northern air routes between Western
Europe, the Arctic and North America. Combined with the high
quality infrastructure of Goose Bay Airport, a creative business
sector and skilled workforce this creates unlimited potential for
future economic development in sectors such as aerospace, defense,
import/export and servicing to the endless stream of traffic
overflying the community. Goose Bay Airport daily hosts
unscheduled technical stops and represents a key port for the
world's airlines.
CFB Goose Bay is an established venue for
international low level flight training, with participating Air
Forces including the United Kingdom, Germany, Holland and Italy.
Containing two major runways, six ramps and twenty-seven hangars,
the airport is an official alternate landing site for the NASA
Space Shuttle Program. A reflection of the quality and scale of
the facilities available.
With the completion of the
improvements in 1999, The Trans Labrador Highway is a high
standard all weather road. Improvements to the highway in recent
years have resulted in new trading patterns, business expansions
and new developments in the tourism industry. An example is major
increases in the volume of trucked freight from central Canada,
accompanied by construction of warehouse space and the location of
an established transportation company in the town.
The Town
is a modern, "wired" community with high-speed Internet capable of
accommodating high-speed data transfers and live satellite
video-conferencing. With several Internet service providers and
web page designers now located in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, the Town
is the recognized technological hub of Labrador. As the level of
available technology has continued to rise, we have gained easier
and broader access to global markets, distance learning programs
and possibilities for strategic alliances around the
world.
The Port of Goose Bay is the termination point for
the Trans Labrador Highway and a vital link for marine service to
the coast of Labrador. Located just 4.5 km from Goose Bay Airport,
it contains two docks. The Main Dock is a 244 m long by 15 m wide
marginal wharf with 9 m. minimum water depth on the west side and
5.6 to 9.1 m. minimum water depth on the east side. The second
dock is a pier wharf 51 m. long with 5.4 to 7 m. minimum water
depth. The main storage shed is 53 m by 31 m. Other infrastructure
includes asphalt and fuel tanks and a transshipment warehouse.
There is also a substantial area of lay down space