June 6, 2003
Fires pose threat
to Nunavut self-insurance plan
City plans to build
local fire training centre
CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Iqaluit is planning to
establish a local fire training centre for volunteer firefighters around Nunavut.
Ian Fremantle, the citys
chief administrative officer, said its a necessary move if the territory
intends to reduce fires. He also expects it will cost the territory less money
to run a local training centre than sending volunteers to the South.
Nunavut mayors also discussed
the idea during the Nunavut Association of Municipalities annual general
meeting held in Cambridge Bay in April.
A closer look at the territorys
proposed self-insurance program worried many members, who realized an unusually
high number of fires could deplete the fund overnight.
Two recent fires in Nunavut,
and the current state of the global insurance industry, is making it hard for
municipalities to get affordable insurance policies.
Iqaluit and all 24 hamlets
eventually signed up for a self-insurance program called Namix. Fremantle says
the city was forced to sign up, or would have been left with no insurance policy.
Their current policy had expired March 31.
We signed up under
duress and have plans to discuss our concerns with the Namix board of directors
in the very near future, Fremantle assured.
One of his main concerns
is the citys role in the program, and the share of premiums that the city
pays.
As the only property-tax
base community in Nunavut, we bear the brunt of the insurance premiums. The
24 hamlets are not property-tax based, and so the premiums paid to the plan
will be from the City of Iqaluit and Government of Nunavut, which presumably
will pay for the hamlets through subsidized funding, he explained.
In the first year, municipalities
will contribute $1.9 million in premiums, and the GN $2 million. A single municipal
unit is estimated to cost as much as $16 million, so its possible that
the fund could be entirely depleted within the first year, Fremantle says.
If the number of
claims were higher than the expected $600,000 for the first year, where would
money come from for future claims? There is no written guarantee from government
to support funding of claims in excess of projections.
If the GN is no longer
a contributor to the fund after the end of the first year, it would make Iqaluit
the largest shareholder in the program.
Fremantle says he worries
that Iqaluit could end up providing the largest share of money even though most
incidents occur in the hamlets.
Furthermore, with a territorial
election next year, there is no guarantee that future governments will make
good on the current funding commitment of the GN.
As it stands, the GN has
committed to contributing $5 million over five years, with the hamlets and Iqaluit
paying $1.9 million per year in the first five years.
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