Difference between revisions of "North Island (Sober Thought)"

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==Transportation==
 
==Transportation==
 
The federal government operates one international and a few regional airports in the provice, and heavily subsidizes the railway system which links Paidrig with the peninsular towns and South Island.  The province pays for the entirety of its stunted road system.
 
The federal government operates one international and a few regional airports in the provice, and heavily subsidizes the railway system which links Paidrig with the peninsular towns and South Island.  The province pays for the entirety of its stunted road system.
 +
 +
==Civil law and law enforcement==
 +
The North Island Constabulary is not commonly armed, and it relies mostly on persuasion and social control to ensure people remain law abiding.
 +
 +
==Health==
 +
The province supports only three fully-fledged hospitals, one secular public, one Catholic private and one Protestant private.  The peninsular towns usually support one or two smaller medical clinics of varying degrees of efficacy.  The North Island public health service proactively visits the outports to promote health before it becomes illness.  Some medical specialists are shared with South Island.

Revision as of 01:49, 11 October 2005

North Island is one of the Coastal Provinces of Sober Thought, and in fact shares Bristle Island with the province of South Island.

North Island (Sober Thought)
Nation: Sober Thought
Capital: Paidrig
Leader: Premier, chosen from among the members of the House of Assembly

Geography and economy

North Island's terrain is rocky and bleak, its coast rippling with merloon-like fjords and several crenel-like peninsulas. The latter support an unchartered town serving as a regional service centre for the many outports accessible primarily or exclusively by sea.

The traditional fishing industry provides an uncertain and declining employment, while non-traditional ventures into tourism have been largely unsuccessful. However, the discovery of fossil fuels offshore near the coal seams of South Island has opened up a new industry which provides much needed money and jobs.

The population is skewed towards older members because many young single residents move to Drewburgh, S.I., or onto the mainland for employment. They sometimes return to raise families when they are older, and often return to retire because of the low cost of housing here. The capital city and metropolis is Paidrig.

Provincial property taxes, housing costs, income and wealth are all low.

Government

Federal government

The province has several single-member simple-plurality districts and a few at-large proportional-representation members in the House of the Federation.

The provincial Premier chooses one of North Island's members of the House of the Provinces while the Leader of the Opposition chooses the other.

Provincial government

The provincial House of Assembly has 40 single-member districts of somewhat uneven size, the constituencies in Paidrig being significantly smaller and more populous compared to peninsular regions and towns.

The MHAs collectively elect the leader of the majority party or coalition as Premier and the leader of the second largest party or coality as Leader of the Opposition, who is considered part of the provincial cabinet for parliamentary purposes.

Municipal government

Paidrig, the provincial capital and metropolis, is the sole chartered municipality in North Island. It is governed by a Mayor and ten City Councillors elected at-large.

Although have no formal constitutional powers, the provincial government has informally delegated much of its power to unincorporated peninsular towns and isolated outports.

Education

The province provides grants to graduates of North Island intermediate schools to attend secondary schools in Paidrig and the peninsular towns. Otherwise, outport children could not continue their education.

Similarly, the province invests heavily in tertiary education: all residents who qualify for admission to Paidrig University receive a twenty per cent scholarship in first year, ten in second and five in third. Scholarships awarded to those at higher levels are tied to academic performance and a commitment to remain in the province after graduation.

Privately, the Catholic University of North Island offers a religious education for those who can afford the tuition fees -- double that its public counterpart. Although each parish gets to send one student on full scholarship and the diocese ten, enrollment remains stagnated at half the level of PU.

Transportation

The federal government operates one international and a few regional airports in the provice, and heavily subsidizes the railway system which links Paidrig with the peninsular towns and South Island. The province pays for the entirety of its stunted road system.

Civil law and law enforcement

The North Island Constabulary is not commonly armed, and it relies mostly on persuasion and social control to ensure people remain law abiding.

Health

The province supports only three fully-fledged hospitals, one secular public, one Catholic private and one Protestant private. The peninsular towns usually support one or two smaller medical clinics of varying degrees of efficacy. The North Island public health service proactively visits the outports to promote health before it becomes illness. Some medical specialists are shared with South Island.