August 13, 2004
Paul Martin braves the North
Nunavut welcomes Prime
Minister, and anticipates a visit from DIAND Minister
SARA MINOGUE
What happened to the Zoo? Prime Minister Paul Martin asked as he
and his wife Sheila left the Frobisher Inn in Iqaluit Wednesday morning to catch
a flight to Pond Inlet. Martin also visited Panniqtuuq before returning to Iqaluit
on Thursday and continuing on to Inuvik for the rest of his northern tour. (PHOTO
BY SARA MINOGUE)
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Prime Minister Paul Martin displayed an intimate knowledge of Iqaluits
raffish past on the first day of his northern tour when he asked, What
happened to the Zoo? as he and his wife Sheila left the Frobisher Inn
in Iqaluit early Wednesday morning to catch a flight to Pond Inlet.
The Zoo was the local nickname for the Frobisher Inns old Tulugaq Bar,
which was replaced last year by the Storehouse Bar and Grill.
The first night of the prime ministers northern tour was a quiet evening
in Iqaluit. Martin officially launched his northern visit at a community event
at Pond Inlet High School at noon on Wednesday.
Martin spent yesterday at a community event in Panniqtuuq before returning
to Iqaluit to meet Premier Paul Okalik and later, some community members at
the Cadet Hall.
The prime minister heads west today to meet Northwest Territories Premier Joe
Handley in Inuvik, and then on to Tuktoyaktuk, Whitehorse and Watson Lake before
wrapping up his visit in Rankin Inlet tomorrow.
Cambridge Bay MLA Keith Peterson welcomed the prime minister to the North in
a letter written Aug. 5.
In the same letter, Peterson expressed regret that Martin would not be visiting
the Kitikmeot region, which, Peterson wrote, has the potential to become
the engine of economic growth for all of the territory.
Peterson first met the prime minister when Martin was Jean Chretiens
finance minister, and Peterson led the Nunavut Association of Municipalities.
I am glad to see that you are finally getting a first-hand look at some
of the issues we discussed, Peterson wrote.
Peterson also invited the new DIAND Minister, Andy Scott, to visit the Kitikmeot
during his northern tour tentatively planned before parliament meets this fall.
Scott, the MP for Fredericton-York-Sudbury in New Brunswick, replaced former
DIAND minister Andy Mitchell in the cabinet shuffle this July. He already had
the northern territories on his agenda when he was serving as minister of state
for infrastructure earlier this year.
This spring, Scott was communicating with Yves Ducharme, president of the Federation
of Canadian Municipalities, about the infrastructure gap in the
North.
In a letter dated May 21, Scott told Ducharme that he agrees a gap exists,
and that educating the government about the region and its lack of infrastructure
was a priority of the secretariat.
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