September 5, 2003
All that glitters
is not gold
A decade ago the people
of Baker Lake fought a mining giant and won - some are not afraid to do it again
PATRICIA
D'SOUZA
Baker
Lake resident Fred Ford: "In my estimation, gold mining is a dirtier business
than uranium mining." (PHOTO
BY PATRICIA D'SOUZA)
|
If everything had gone
according to plan for a German-owned company called Urangeselleschaft Canada
Ltd. in the late 1980s, there would be a uranium mine in full operation today
upwind and upwater from Baker Lake.
The company's Kiggavik
mine would have leached radon gas, a byproduct of uranium, across caribou calving
grounds 75 kilometres west of Baker Lake from 1993, when the mine was expected
to go into production, until 2004, when decommissioning was scheduled to begin.
But things didn't go according
to plan for UG, as the company is commonly known.
What began as a rumbling
among the residents of Baker Lake soon became a powerful force of opposition
as information about the company's plans began to spread.
Open-pit uranium mining
leaves behind a waste component that is almost as radioactive as the uranium
itself. Some researchers condent the material, or tailings, remains hazardous
for more than 250,000 years.
It is most often associated
with an increased cancer rate among humans, in addition to birth defects, high
infant mortality and chronic lung, eye, skin and reproductive illnesses.
That might have been enough
reason for the people of Baker Lake, the community closest to the Kiggavik project,
to oppose the plans. But the issue became a personal one for them when it came
to involve the region's caribou herds.
Baker Lake Inuit are known
as Caribou Inuit because of their dependence on the land beasts. The only inland
community in Nunavut, Baker Lake is too far from open water for people to rely
on sea mammals for survival.
"If anything happened
to the caribou we'd have nothing left but welfare," said Baker Lake resident
Joan Scottie in a presentation to the World Uranium Hearing in 1992.
Scottie was one of the
founders of the Baker Lake Concerned Citizens' Committee (CCC), a group of people
who made it their responsibility to learn about uranium mining and inform others
in the community in simple English - and Inuktitut.
"Our strategy was
quite simple. We decided to participate in the federal government's review process
and try and make it work for us. In the case of the environmental assessment
process for the proposed Kiggavik mine, the panel tried something new. They
asked us what questions should be included in the guidelines," Scottie
said during her presentation.
"Many of the questions
we raised were included in the final environmental impact statement guidelines
that the environmental assessment panel gave to the company. This made UG's
job much harder."
The CCC gathered strength
as its message spread throughout the Kivalliq region. Residents of other communities
collected 1,700 signatures opposing the mine, and soon the Inuit Circumpolar
Conference, the Keewatin Inuit Association, the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, the
Tungavik Federation of Nunavut, the Northwest Territories Federation of Labour,
and a host of other organizations, pledged their full support.
Then, the Baker Lake hamlet
council agreed to hold a plebiscite regarding the Kiggavik project. The vote
took place on March 26, 1990.
"We worked flat out,
just like for an election," Scottie said. "I'll never forget the tension
of that night, waiting for the results. Finally the person we had scrutineering
the ballots came out looking very happy - 90.2 per cent of the people had voted
'no' to Kiggavik."
A few weeks later, the
environmental assessment panel released its review of the EIS. "In general
they trashed it and in particular they said that the social impact assessment
was completely inadequate," Scottie said.
And finally, on July 5,
1990, UG asked the environmental assessment panel for an "indefinite delay"
of the review process.
It was a significant victory
for the residents of Baker Lake, and it demonstrated the power of ordinary people.
As the Meadowbank gold
mine 70 kilometres north of the community progresses, many residents are thinking
about Kiggavik and wondering where all that power has gone.
But though people in the
community admit to having many concerns about the Meadowbank project, the grassroots
movement has been slow to develop this time around because many feel they simply
don't have enough information.
While the Kiggavik project
description report was issued to residents in both English and Inuktitut, the
Meadowbank document was in English only, with a one-page summary in Inuktitut.
Fred Ford, a long-time
resident of Baker Lake and former member of the CCC, holds up a blackened photocopy
of a map of the community, meant to identify plots of land the mine's parent
company, Cumberland Resources Ltd. of Vancouver, intends to use. The map is
almost completely indecipherable.
"Now what the hell
is that?" he asks.
"Right here,"
he says, pointing to a spot among the blurred lines and smudges, "is where
I keep my fish nets."
The lot he indicates is
the one Cumberland will use to store quantities of ammonium nitrate and cyanide,
among other chemicals. Baker Lake hamlet council gave the company conditional
permission to use the land near the lake this past June.
And while gold mining does
not pose the direct health concerns that uranium mining does, the human and
environmental costs could be even greater, Ford says.
"In my estimation,
gold mining is a dirtier business than uranium mining. It uses more chemicals,
like cyanide," he says.
Scottie has heard concerns
about the Meadowbank project as well. "The people that approached me weren't
too thrilled about it," she said in a telephone interview from her home
in Baker Lake.
"We heard they were
planning on storing some chemicals, what's that, ammonium nitrate, cyanide and
other stuff that they were going to be using at the mine." Ammonium nitrate
is a powerful explosive. Cyanide is a poison.
But she says ordinary people
in Baker Lake have not been consulted about the project and the threats it may
pose to their community.
"Cumberland Resources,
they have held maybe a couple or three public meetings over the winter, but
when they need approval they go to hamlet council," she says. "We
live here too. Our kids are here. Our grandchildren are here."
However, a representative
for Cumberland told Nunatsiaq News in late July that the company has
worked closely with Baker Lake residents from the beginning.
"It's a great community.
We've been working long and hard and we're in a partnership with Baker Lake,"
said Craig Goodings, a Vancouver consultant working with Cumberland. "There
isn't a lot of issues here. The community wants it and there isn't a lot of
environmental red flags."
To be fair, Nunavut and
Kivalliq politicians have been working very closely with Cumberland.
But that's not exactly the same as community support.
"Our politicians have
been pretty vocal, and I'm not sure they speak for everybody in the community,"
Ford says. "The final veto should be here with the people."
And the people have a lot
of questions.
"I don't know about
this Cumberland because everything is so quiet, nobody talks about it,"
Scottie says. "This Cumberland Resources, it's not like a uranium mine,
so we're not as worried as before about its byproducts, but it's still a mine
and residents of Baker Lake should know what's going on. I'm sure we have a
lot of questions, but we don't know where to begin."
The promise of jobs in
the mining sector doesn't do much to persuade them. A few entry-level jobs won't
replace the loss suffered by thousands of Inuit if their way of life is threatened.
"We have concerns
also about social issues," Scottie says. "It'll be good for the community
economically, but what about all the bad sites?"
Cumberland has yet to release
an environmental impact statement on the Meadowbank project. However, when it
does, there will likely be a round of public hearings in the community to allow
residents to ask questions.
"Mining companies
have a poor history of what they've done in other places. They're not here to
preserve our way of life, they're here for their investors," Ford says.
"It will change the
face of our community forever."
|