May 21, 2004
Time running out for Nanisivik town site
Cost of running training
centre may be too high
SARA
MINOGUE
Nanisivik's former town site, including its famous dome building, may get bulldozed
away if an alternative use can't be found for the site. (FILE PHOTO)
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Quttiktuq MLA Levi Barnabas said he was alarmed last week when he received
a copy of an email addressed to the premier from Breakwater Resources Ltd.,
saying the company can no longer wait for a GN decision before demolishing buildings
at the mothballed Nanisivik town site this spring.
Ed Picco, the education minister, rose in the legislative assembly on Monday
to explain that a consultant has been hired to study the feasibility of using
the site as a training facility.
Picco said he's preparing a request for cabinet to look at the situation and
consider a cost-benefit analysis of doing something with the site, but when
given the costs of using Nanisivik as as training school, he has already concluded
that "it doesn't make any sense."
The Department of Community and Government Services is doing another review
to look at the conditions of the buildings left behind at the site.
Preliminary findings from the studies estimate that it would cost $5 million
to upgrade and repair the buildings at the site. Operating a training school
would cost an extra $5 million a year.
In the meantime, Picco has written to DIAND Minister Andy Mitchell, to ask
about access to some other federal site that could be used for vocational training.
Arctic Bay residents have long hoped that another use can be found for the
former Nanisivik town site, located about 34 kilometres from the hamlet.
Breakwater Resources Ltd. closed the site in the fall of 2001, because of low
zinc prices.
Breakwater will start its site clean-up this spring and summer.
That will include the demolishing of many buildings, including a large white
dome that housed the company cafeteria and a complex known as the "town
centre," which housed a swimming pool, gym, school, daycare centre, fire
hall, RCMP detachment, Northern store and offices.
"We have much needed infrastructure in Arctic Bay," Barnabas told
the legislative assembly in Inuktitut, "but I am repeatedly told that we
have all of the infrastructure requirements in Nanisivik.
"If we are going to be just destroying the property, would it not be better
if we look at better solutions and move things to Arctic Bay and look at using
the property instead of just destroying it?"
Picco replied that he would move the issue into cabinet over the next "couple
of weeks."
"We know that DEW Lines have been abandoned all across the north... we
did not just run up there and take them over," Picco said.
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