March 5, 2004
Residents enraged about utilidor switchover
Lower Base ratepayers
complain about added financial burden
GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS
Paul Landry, a resident of the Lower Base district in Iqaluit, questioned city
administration why he has to pay the full-cost of hooking up to a utilidor,
while some of his neighbours got government subsidies. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Dozens of Iqaluit ratepayers forced to pay thousands of dollars to change their
water and plumbing systems want to know why they can't get a financial hand
from government like their neighbours did three years ago.
During a meeting with city hall administration on Feb. 27, property owners
in Lower Base district complained that either the City of Iqaluit or the Government
of Nunavut are breaking their promise of subsidizing a mandatory utilidor program
in their neighbourhood.
"It is unacceptable to me to be treated differently," resident Paul
Landry said during the packed meeting in council chambers. "Why should
I be a second-class citizen when I pay the same amount of taxes?"
The Lower Base utilidor program remains a political flashpoint more than three
years after city hall first told 89 property owners they would have to pay up
to $20,000 each to connect to a newly built utilidor system. Municipal government
would pay $1.7 million to assemble the main parts of the utilidor system.
After residents complained about being forced to pay, about four years ago,
the Government of Nunavut stepped in with a $300,000 grant, which covered some
expenses in the first phase of the project, less than half of the buildings
in the area.
Home owners who weren't picked for the first phase of the project claim the
government grant - which the City of Iqaluit claims has dried up - was supposed
to be for everyone.
"That would be a breach of a memorandum of understanding," resident
Lisa Ipeelie said of the lack of subsidy for property owners still receiving
trucked water and sewage services.
Ipeelie also questioned why city hall wanted to finish the project three years
ahead of schedule. The change means homeowners listed for the second phase of
the project will have to find more money than their neighbours, and do so much
earlier than they had planned.
Anyone refusing to pay will see their water and sewage bills raised, to reflect
the increased cost of servicing their house with trucks in an area that has
switched to utilidors.
Ipeelie suggested stepping up the schedule will leave some property owners
unable to pay by the new deadline of Dec. 31, 2007.
Brad Sokach, Iqaluit's director of engineering, said administration decided
to speed up the utilidor schedule after drawing up this year's budget. Budget
figures show that trucking water and sewage costs nearly three times as much
as the utilidors.
In an interview after the meeting, Sokach said he reviewed which neighbourhood
should be weaned off truck service, and found the Lower Base's relatively dense
layout will give Iqaluit "more bang for our buck" than other options.
Besides saving money for the city's budget, Sokach said administration also
pushed to accelerate the utilidor program to cut down on truck traffic in Iqaluit's
downtown area around the Lower Base district.
"We don't have a very good safety record, as I'm sure you all know,"
Sokach said during the meeting. "[So] we're trying to get trucks off the
road."
Shawn Maley, assistant deputy minister of the community government and transportation
department, said the Government of Nunavut only promised $600,000 for the first
phase of the project, including the grant for residents, and has not committed
to further funding.
However, Maley added that the government would consider giving another grant,
pending a funding proposal from the city.
"They need to submit a proposal and we need to look at it," he said.
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