The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Norwegian politician to visit Saskatchew­an

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REGINA (CP) — The deputy mayor of a Norwegian municipali­ty with a sculpture that set off a mighty moose match with a Saskatchew­an prairie city is to arrive for a visit later this week.

Part of her mission will be to attend her first hockey game.

“It’s cool that my debut is in Canada — the hockey nation,” Linda Otnes Henriksen, whose flight is to land in Regina on Thursday night, told The Canadian Press.

Henriksen’s visit has been dubbed an “internatio­nal moose summit” by the city of Moose Jaw. But Henriksen of Stor-Elvdal characteri­zes the trip as a chance to meet the city’s mayor and residents after weeks of back-andforth headlines.

After decades of believing a highway attraction named Mac was the biggest moose in the world, Moose Jaw was toppled from top spot when it was revealed Stor-Elvdal had a silvery moose sculpture that was taller by 30 centimetre­s.

Tourism Moose Jaw almost immediatel­y launched a campaign to reclaim its place by making Mac’s rack a little taller.

Last month, Moosehead Breweries donated $25,000 towards the cause while a GoFundMe campaign has raised about $13,000 of a $50,000 goal.

Henriksen said she decided to send a message to Moose Jaw’s mayor asking if she could pay a visit. Fraser Tolmie happily agreed.

“We thought … why not? We should get together and meet,” she said. “Since both moose have really been placed on the map … a friendship would be good for both of us.”

In a statement posted on the city’s website, Tolmie welcomes Henriksen and notes the possibilit­y of building economic or tourism partnershi­ps.

Henriksen believes the ongoing moose saga could open the door to a closer relationsh­ip.

“We are trying to do our best in order to make tourists come here,” she said of Stor-Elvldal, located in east-central Norway.

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