The Functions of a Dominion Department of Mines (c08ef586-7eba-4eab-be46-002967c7fb2f)

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. C. Rowe
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
2301 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

DR. W. F. GRAY (Contributed discussion, presented at meeting by Mr. S. C. Mifilen): Mr. Rowe's suggestion that the Institute should organize itself to interpret the needs of the mining industry to federal and provincial mines departments should commend itself to our membership as sensible and practical, and as one which these public administrative bodies may welcome. One has to start with the premise that those who head the departments of mines in question have the welfare of the industry at heart. Also, it must be postulated that the technical viewpoint of our membership is necessarily free of political considerations. With these reservations, one ventures to state that both Mr. Rowe in his communication to the present session of the Institute, and Professor M. Y. Williams in his earlier communication to the Western Meeting, on The Geological Survey and Mining Development (1), voice the regret general among our membership at the abandonment of the honoured name, and to some extent of the status, of the Geological Survey of Canada. The writer, in 1932, devoted his Presidential Address to the Institute to an appreciation of the value to Canadian mining of the Geological Survey of Canada (2), affirming the desire of the Institute "that the work of the Survey shall be maintained at the highest pitch of efficiency the resources of our country will permit, because, to scrimp expenses on the Survey, is 'to save at the spigot and lose at the bunghole'." He believes that is still the opinion of the Institute, and, if contraction of the usefulness of the Survey is feared by our members at this time, it is incumbent upon the Institute, in fairness to those who direct our government, to say so in precise and explicit terms. Mr. Rowe puts the situation pithily when he writes: "We have reached a stage in our development where a stock-taking and co-ordination of existing knowledge and data is essential. This is a part of that basic function of Dominion mineral technical services which is national and not provincial in its scope".
Citation

APA: R. C. Rowe  (1939)  The Functions of a Dominion Department of Mines (c08ef586-7eba-4eab-be46-002967c7fb2f)

MLA: R. C. Rowe The Functions of a Dominion Department of Mines (c08ef586-7eba-4eab-be46-002967c7fb2f). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1939.

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