July 14, 2006
Akesuk unveils new
housing allocations
Rising fuel, sealift
costs shrink 800 units down to 725
JOHN
THOMPSON
Olayuk Akesuk, the housing
minister, released details this week explaining how the Government of Nunavut
plans to spread $200 million in federal housing money around the territory over
the next three years.
Iqaluit will receive 57
of the 725 units, followed by Arviat and Baker Lake, which will each get 52
units.
The GN plans to give Rankin
Inlet and Igloolik 41 units each, Pangnirtung 40 units, and Pond Inlet and Cape
Dorset 36 units.
The rest of the allocations
are as follows:
Kugluktuk, 34 units; Cambridge
Bay, 33 units; Gjoa Haven, 32 units; Taloyoak, 30 units; Clyde River, 29 units;
Sanikiluaq, 27 units; Repulse Bay, 26 units; Hall Beach, 25 units; Arctic Bay
and Coral Harbour, 24 units; Kugaaruk, 22; Qikiqtarjuaq, 21; Kimmirut, 10; Chesterfield
Inlet and Whale Cove, 10; and Resolute Bay and Grise Fiord, six.
Most of these homes will
be designed as multiplex units, to make the most of the money, Akesuk said during
an interview on Tuesday.
But details won't be revealed
until after this summer, after the GN conducts consultations in each of Nunavut's
communities about housing needs, Akesuk said.
"We can't make everyone
happy," Akesuk said, but added "725 units will go a long way with
our needs."
In this summer's sealift
season, about $11 million in supplies will be shipped north to build a five-plex
in each community in Nunavut except Grise Fiord, Whale Cove and Chesterfield
Inlet, which will receive duplexes.
But most residents won't
hear the sounds of banging nails and sawing wood for these homes until early
2007, when construction is slated to start.
The $200 million comes
from a Northern Housing Trust, set up in response to arrangements announced
last November by former prime minister Paul Martin, at a first ministers' meeting
in Kelowna, B.C.
At Kelowna, the outgoing
Liberal government promised to meet 35 per cent of Nunavut's housing needs within
five years. The $200 million promised by the Conservatives meets less than 20
per cent of Nunavut's needs.
But it's plenty more than
the GN could afford to build by itself.
Akesuk said he still plans
to pursue the federal government for the full amount that the GN needs to build
the 3,000 units it needs to meet its social housing shorfall, at a cost of at
least $1.9 billion.
"It's like a downpayment
for us," he said of the $200 million. "We're still going to fight
the federal government for more housing."
"We still need 2,500
more units."
When the federal government
announced the $200 million, it was expected to purchase 800 housing units.
But since then the cost
of shipping supplies north on the sealift has risen, pushed upwards by increased
fuel prices, leaving the GN with the new total of 725 units.
As well, the GN plans to
launch a new apprenticeship program for carpenters, electricians and plumbers
to work on building these new homes.
Akesuk said the goal of
the training program, a joint initiative between the Nunavut Housing Corporation
and the Department of Education, is to produce 35 to 40 of these tradespeople
by the end of the three years.
The program should be launched
either this fall or early next year, Akesuk said - in either case, in time for
the next wave of construction. "That's our aim," Akesuk said.
The goal of the program
is to produce tradespeople who could work for housing authorities in their home
communities to maintain existing housing units and build future units, Akesuk
said.
The GN has yet to get money
to pay for the program, however. Akesuk said the GN is pressing the federal
government for more money.
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