August 19, 2005
City to squeeze more
space out of old cemetery
New site won't be ready
for at least one year
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
By
moving this storage shed at the old cemetery, Iqaluit city staff hope to create
between eight and 16 new grave sites. (PHOTO BY JIM BELL)
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Iqaluit city council voted
this week to make room this summer for as many as 24 new grave sites at the
community's old cemetery, buying more time to properly prepare a new cemetery
site in the West 40.
They plan to create roughly
eight to 16 new grave sites by removing a storage shed at the north-east corner
of the old cemetery. If they need more space, they say they can create at least
another eight sites by removing a turn-circle for vehicles in the middle of
the cemetery.
The exact number of new
grave sites that could be created depends on rock formations under the ground,
and accessibility for back-hoe vehicles.
Ian Fremantle, the city's
chief administrative officer, said the city's new cemetery site, in the West
40 area below a knoll occupied by Telesat Canada satellite dishes, won't be
ready this year.
That's because the city
needs to do more drainage work, wait for a layer of sand to become more compact,
and consult more with Iqaluit residents and churches.
The city's acting director
of public works, Chris Freda, was scheduled to ask city council's public works
committee to support the plan at a noon meeting this past Monday, but the committee
could not form a quorum.
But the matter was brought
up again at Tuesday evening's council meeting, when council approved the removal
of the storage shed.
As for the new cemetery
site in the West 40, city council chose it earlier this year, after years of
consultation and discussion of various options.
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