July 11, 2003
Fire razes Iqaluit
elementary school
Education officials
rush to find classroom space
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nunavut's department of
education is scrambling to find classrooms for about 200 students displaced
by a fire that destroyed Iqaluit's Joamie School last week.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Flames overtake Joamie
school at 10:30 a.m. on July 4. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Fire ripped through the
14-year-old building on July 4. Officials are still investigating the cause
of the blaze. No one was injured.
"We have a short window
to deal with this, which is why it's a priority," said Pam Hine, deputy
minister for the department of education.
"We're still looking
at all our options."
Iqaluit's remaining schools,
including Ecole des Trois Soleils, Nanook School and Arctic College, are potential
locations.
Rebuilding the structure
will cost about $10 million, Hine said, adding the figure is a preliminary estimate.
Construction could begin this summer, but a new structure won't be ready in
time for the new school year.
"We need to start
bringing in resources like desks and books so we can get as close to a September
start as possible," she said.
"It's not going to
affect [jobs] other than it's going to add to teachers' workloads," Hine
said.
Iqaluit MLAs want construction
to begin immediately.
"As a parent myself,
I recognize the need to move quickly. I would like to see construction begin
this summer," said Iqaluit Centre MLA Hunter Tootoo.
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Anne Marlene Kilabuk
comforts her daughter Katrina Lewis, who just completed Grade 3.
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Eyewitnesses said the fire
began under the gym around 5:30 Friday morning. Five hours later, orange flames
and plumes of black smoke were billowing from the school.
"We're still trying
to find out how it got away from us," said Cory Chegwyn, Iqaluit's fire
chief.
Teachers, students and
parents stood behind yellow police tape and watched dumbfounded as their school
was engulfed in amber flames. Anne Marlene Kilabuk comforted her sobbing daughter,
Katrina, who just completed Grade 3 at the school.
About three million litres
of water were used to battle the blaze, said Bob Brouillet, a water treatment
plant operator for the City of Iqaluit.
The city issued a 24-hour
water-conservation order on the heels of the fire to allow the system to replenish
itself.
The pale blue building
overlooking Frobisher Bay was the first school in Nunavut recognized for "going
green" - a nationally recognized environmental initiative.
Among the many items lost
in the fire were principal David Serkoak's Inuit drum collection. Serkoak was
out of town on July 4.
Losing a school to fire
is something Donald Mearns knows about. The vice-principal of Attagoyuk School
in Pangnirtung watched his school burn to the ground in 1997.
To add insult to injury,
Attagoyuk School was only a week away from re-opening after two years of renovations.
"Watching your school
burn is up there with losing a relative or friend, it's that kind of loss. All
your memories, resources and ties to the school go up in smoke. I really hope
the powers that be give the teachers the support they need," Mearns said.
The Pangnirtung fire was
caused by an electrical problem. The community coped by setting up classrooms
in the elementary school, Arctic College and empty homes.
In 1998, Cambridge Bay
lost its school to arson. A new $17-million school opened there in 2002.
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