Otoineppu, Hokkaido

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Teshiogawa onsen

Template:Nihongo is a village located in Kamikawa Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. Template:As of, the village had an estimated population of 584 in 402 households, and a population density of 2.1 people per km2.<ref name="Otoineppu-hp">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The total area of the village is Template:Cvt. Otoineppu designates itself as the "smallest village in Hokkaido".<ref name="n"/><ref name="c"/><ref name="pop"/>

Etymology

In the Ainu language, Otoineppu means "muddy river mouth". The name is probably a reference to muddy appearance of the water at the confluence of the Teshio River and one of its many tributaries, the Otoineppu River.<ref name="gaiyo"/>

Geography

Otoineppu Post Office

Otoineppu is a landlocked village at the north of Hokkaido. The village sits at the northern tip of the Nayoro Basin, and is flanked by the Kitami Mountains to the east and the Teshio Mountains to the west. The village measures Template:Convert from east to west and Template:Convert from north to south, and sits at an elevation of Template:Convert. 80% of the village is covered by forest.<ref name="n"/><ref name="ichi"/>

The Teshio River (Template:Convert), the fourth longest river in Japan, flows north through Otoineppu before turning sharply west near the village center. The JR Hokkaido Sōya Main Line and Japan National Route 40 runs along the Teshio River through Otoineppu.<ref name="n"/>

Neighboring municipalities

Otoineppu borders four towns in Hokkaido:

Climate

Otoineppu has a humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb). Otoineppu, which sits only Template:Convert from both the Sea of Okhotsk and Japan Sea, is located within a maritime climate. The village is ringed in by mountains from all four directions, and sees significant temperature extremes. The average temperatures from December to March are below Template:Convert, with days as low as Template:Convert; temperatures from June to September are typically above Template:Convert, with some days reaching above Template:Convert.<ref name="ichi"/>

Otoineppu is noted for its deep snowfalls; some areas of the village have snowfalls as high as Template:Convert. In 1998 the village had Hokkaido's second-deepest snowfall on record.<ref name="ichi"/>

Template:Weather box

Demographics

Per Japanese census data, the population of Otoineppu is as shown below. The village is in a long period of sustained population loss.

Template:Historical populations

History

The name "Otoineppu" first appeared in the 1797 "Matsumae Chi Nami Nishi Ezo Chi Meiseiki", where it was written as "Otoekofu".

In 1857 Matsuura Takeshiro visited the Teshio River basin and stayed with an Ainu elder near the current Osashima neighborhood.

The construction of a road north of Asahikawa, which began in 1896, finally reached the current Otoineppu village area in 1904. At this time, post office manager Nagamura Hide (a Hokkaido government official from Ishikawa Prefecture) moved to the area, and this marked the founding of Otoineppu village. The following year, 32 tenant farming families settled in the area. By the start of the Taisho period, about 200 families had settled in various parts of the village. In 1916, the village of Template:Nihongo was established. The area developed as a hub for railway construction and water transport. It was renamed Otoineppu in 1963. The name of the village was changed due to the fact that center of the village is in the Otoineppu district, and Otoineppu Station was widely known as a terminus on the JR Sōya Main Line and the Tenpoku Line.<ref name="n"/><ref name="c"/> However, the population dropped sharply due to the privatization of the Japan National Railways in the 1980s, the abolition of the Tenpoku Line in 1989, and the reduction in station operations.

Government

Otoineppu has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral village council of eight members. Otoineppu, collectively with the other municipalities of Kawakami sub-prefecture, contributes three members to the Hokkaidō Prefectural Assembly. In terms of national politics, the village is part of the Hokkaidō 6th district of the lower house of the Diet of Japan.

In the 2017 Japanese general election, 55.97% of Otoineppu's proportional ballots were cast for one of the three parties in the pacifist opposition coalition (the Constitutional Democratic Party, the Social Democratic Party, and the Japanese Communist Party), making it the most left-leaning municipality in the country in this election under that definition.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Economy

The economy of Otoineppu is based on agriculture and forestry. Buckwheat is the main crop.

Education

The Otoineppu maintains two schools: Otoineppu Elementary School and Otoineppu Junior High School, operated by the village government The village also maintains a high school, Hokkaido Otoineppu Arts & Craft High School, operated by the Hokkaido Prefectural Board of Education.

Transportation

Otoineppu Station

Railway

JR Hokkaido - Sōya Main Line

Template:Ifsubst style="color:#954a35">■ Template:STN - Template:STN - Template:STN - Template:STN

Otoineppu is served by the JR Hokkaido Sōya Main Line. The Sōya Main Line is the northernmost train line in Japan, and runs from Asahikawa Station in Asahikawa in north-central Hokkaido to Wakkanai Station in Wakkanai at the very north of the prefecture.

The defunct JNR Tempoku Line once broke off from the Sōya Main Line at Otoineppu Station and ran north to the coast of the Sea of Okhotsk, and again met the Sōya Main Line at Wakkanai Station. The line was discontinued in 1989 and replaced by bus service.<ref name="n"/>

Highways

Culture

Mascot

File:Otokki.png
Otokki, the village's mascot

Otoineppu's mascot is Template:Nihongo. He is a Picea glehnii tree who is a friendly park ranger. He sometimes wears a crown as a park ranger hat. He also attends events, especially school-related functions. His design was unveiled on 4 August 2013.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Notable people from Otoineppu

References

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