Features News Desk News Briefs News Summaries Columnists Sports Editorial Arctic arts Readers comment Find a job Tenders Classifieds Subscriptions Market reports Northern mining Oil & Gas Handy Links Construction (PDF) Opportunities North Best of Bush Visitors guides Obituaries Feature Issues Advertising Contacts Archives Today's weather Leave a message
|
|
Bracing for impact
Andrew Rankin Northern News Services Published Thursday, May 7, 2009
Bob Simpson and Lucy Kuptana, director, intergovernmental relations and executive director of community development division for the IRC, respectively are two of the main players on the project.
They said the overwhelming priority among citizens deals with education and addictions services, which are already urgent concerns. "The fund is all about mitigating the impacts of the Mackenzie Pipeline when it arrives," said Kuptana. I think addictions services in our region are limited . It's a big problem in our communities in Inuvik as a regional centre and people see it and have been talking about it for years, but government doesn't have the funds to even face the problem." Likewise is education, said Simpson who's been involved in extensive talks with the Beaufort Delta Education Council about increasing teaching staff, providing more specialized education, scholarships as well as more infrastructure such as science labs. Cultural and language training as well as investing in early childhood development are a priority in the plan as well. The money will come from a $500 million fund split up among the Inuvialuit, Gwich'in, Sahtu, and Dehcho regions designed to deal with impacts of the proposed $16 billion pipeline, particularly socioeconomic concerns. The IRC's portion will be spread out over 10 years. Simpson and Kuptana are involved in the final drafting of the 400-page document, which will be completed in the upcoming weeks. In their roles as project facilitators for the last three years, the duo have been consulting each Beaufort Delta community through surveys and several workshops to find out where the community feels the money should be spent. The pipeline project is still being studied by the Joint Review Panel. After that, it's expected the federal government will set up an agency where the money will be managed through guidance from a regional committee made up of four appointed Inuvialuit representatives and two territorial government representatives. The plan also calls for an addictions centre, in which Kuptana said she would like to see a holistic approach to healing, pointing to the former House of Hope in Tuktoyaktuk as a good example, where patients were looked after long after being discharged. "We need a place that promotes sobriety and family, where people can go and feel comfortable and they don't feel pressure to drink." The pair will be looking for a release of money to start infrastructure projects such as the addictions centre, library and science lab as much as a couple of years in advance of the pipeline project. That way they say, they'll be ahead of the game. "We're still dealing with the impacts of residential schools, and the 1980s when oil was a big thing in the Beaufort Sea," she said. "People are still dealing with that and to have the pipeline on top of this, it's going to be huge and it's going to hit a lot of families. We have to be prepared." |