August 22, 2003
24 Kitikmeot jobs
lost in Lupin shutdown
Nunavut's "neglected"
region copes with economic shock
JIM BELL
The people of the western
Kitikmeot will lose at least 24 high-paying jobs as gold production grinds to
a halt at the Lupin Mine on Contwoyto Lake.
Nunavut's last working
mine suspended operations last week, reducing mineral production in the territory
to zero for the foreseeable future.
Though world gold prices
are now high, operating costs at Lupin's aging ore-body are even higher, forcing
its owner, Kinross Gold Corp. of Toronto, to mothball the mine's operations
pending a complete review of its future.
The decision affects 235
full-time fly-in, fly-out workers, and 70 contract employees. About 40 workers
are residents of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.
Of those, at least 24 live
in the western Kitikmeot.
Charlie
Lyall, president of the Kitikmeot Corporation: "It would be a shame to
lose all that really good infrastructure. It is an invaluable piece of property."
(FILE PHOTO)
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"There are a lot of
families that are going to be affected, and there are a lot of families in this
region whose major source of income is Lupin. You know it's going to affect
people," said Charlie Lyall, president of the beneficiary-owned Kitikmeot
Corporation.
When asked in a telephone
interview if he expects any help from the Government of Nunavut, Lyall gave
a loud, mocking laugh.
"I learned a long
time ago not to make any assumptions with the Government of Nunavut whatsoever,"
Lyall said. "The problem that we have in this region is that we are so
ignored by that side of the territory [Iqaluit]. I'm not that optimistic."
The Kitikmeot's mining
potential is enormous, notwithstanding the Lupin shutdown, but Lyall said the
GN doesn't realize that.
"It's the future of
the economic development of Nunavut. There's no doubt about that. I fail to
understand the government," Lyall said.
Alex Buchan, economic development
officer for the municipality of Kugluktuk, said with some retraining, most of
the laid-off Lupin workers could eventually get new jobs.
"I think that it is
bad news for the community and the workers. In the long run, I don't think that
these workers will have a serious difficulty in obtaining employment elsewhere.
There are options. Maybe they involve retraining or additional training or what-not,
but I think it is still possible for these individuals to obtain work."
Kugluktuk is the hardest-hit
community with at least 14 family breadwinners expecting layoff notices.
Those are jobs the community
can ill afford to lose. Nunavut's 2001 household survey showed that Kugluktuk's
real unemployment rate stood at 28.5 per cent at the time of the survey.
And Buchan said the hamlet's
employment officer is already overworked dealing with some of the staff shift
changes at Diavik and Ekati diamond mines.
Buchan said it's workers
who held high-paying underground jobs who will have the hardest time finding
new work.
That's because most new
mines proposed for the region would be above-ground, open-pit operations. One
exception is Miramar's Hope Bay gold mine - but that project is still tied up
in regulatory red tape, and it is only projected to last for two years when
it does start up.
Kugluktuk's hamlet council
was to have met this Monday night to discuss the impact of the Lupin shutdown.
In an interview last week,
Keith Peterson, the mayor of Cambridge Bay, said at least 10 workers in his
community would be affected by the Lupin layoffs. Those jobs represent $400,000
a year in wages.
But he said the region
is better prepared to handle the economic shock of a mine shutdown than it was
in 1998, when Lupin suspended operations for two years.
"I guess that you
could say the temporary closure a few years ago was kind of a wake-up call.
Instead of folks waiting for mines to come along, we got more proactive and
worked more closely with the companies that are developing mines and the companies
that are exploring for new minerals," Peterson said.
Cambridge Bay's real unemployment
rate in 2001 was 17.5 per cent.
Meanwhile, Ted Rutherglen,
Lupin's manager of human resources, was busy sending out layoff notices to employees
last week.
Rutherglen would not comment
on whether or not Kinross might close the mine for good if its review was negative.
But the prognosis isn't
good. The effects of a rising Canadian dollar have wiped out any benefits the
company achieved from cost-cutting efforts last May, when they dumped 75 workers.
Lupin has been producing
gold at a cost of $409 an ounce - but Kinross has been selling it for only $345
an ounce, creating big losses for the company.
"At this time, our
costs are extremely high and an aggressive effort has been put forward to reduce
the costs, but we have not been able to achieve that," Rutherglen said.
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