August 15, 2003
GN explores tourism
in "have-not" communities
For places bypassed
by decentralization, the GN is looking at tourism development
JANE
GEORGE
Spring campers, hungry
polar bears and migratory birds regularly stop at the ancient sod huts, tent
rings, cairns and fox traps at Alijivik near Coral Harbour.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
GN is experimenting with tourism development in non-decentralized communities
like Coral Harbour. (FILE PHOTO)
|
But residents of Coral
Harbour some day hope to welcome cruise ship passengers and other tourists to
Alijivik - a kind of compensation for being passed over when decentralised Nunavut
governments jobs were handed out.
Alijivik, also called "The
Lost City of the North," was the home of the now-vanished Sallirmiut, believed
to be the last of the original Tuniit tribes, known for their remarkable strength,
short stature, strange hairdos and their ancient language.
The Alijivik site is one
of the potential attractions that Nunavut's department of sustainable development
wants to develop as a way of drawing visitors to Coral Harbour.
This week, representatives
from Coral Harbour, the Department of Sustainable Development (DSD) and Nunavut's
department of cultural, elders and youth will visit the site to better evaluate
Alijvik's potential and develop a "community attraction plan."
"Hopefully, with the
endorsement of the community, it could become a park," said John Ningeongan,
the former mayor of Coral Harbour, who serves as a liaison on DSD's development
project in the community.
Ningeongan said Alijivik
could draw visitors from the future national park at Wager Bay who would be
keen to visit another nearby site of interest in the region.
An interpretation centre
as well as crafts display and sales at Alijivik could give Coral Harbour an
important economic boost.
"Hopefully, it will
create some employment for the community. Since the government decentralization
was only for some communities, people were wanting some means to help people
in Coral Harbour," Ningeongan said.
Ningeongan said people
in Coral Harbour feel left out of the benefits of government decentralization.
In Hall Beach, another
community that will not benefit from decentralization, DSD is also looking into
an attraction development plan for which it recently sent out a request for
proposals.
Chris Grosset of DSD's
parks and conservation areas section, said a preliminary study has already been
completed in Hall Beach. This involved several site visits by consultants as
well as meetings with community residents.
In Hall Beach attractions
for possible development include the Dew Line site, which was established in
1957 as part of the early warning radar defense system across the North.
As well, Thule sites from
1,000 years ago, including remains of summer and winter houses with flagstone
floors, stone sleeping platforms with walls, rafters and doors made of bowhead
whalebones, are also located in the vicinity of Hall Beach.
The community attraction
development plan for Hall Beach should be finished early in 2004.
But, at the same time that
the GN is developing potential tourist attractions in non-decentralized communities,
there are questions about whether politics should guide tourism development.
The impact of SARS, rising
insurance costs, unpredictable exchange rates and the threat of terrorism means
that even the development of attractions won't guarantee businesses, or that
any tourists will even come to Nunavut.
"The tourism industry
has never been in a more vulnerable condition than it is today," said Maureen
Bungaard of Nunavut Tourism.
|