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March 1, 2002
Picco cautious on Chesterfield
group home deal
GN studying leases carefully
JANE
GEORGE
Nunavut Health Minister
Ed Picco said he wants to make doubly sure that leasing is better than building
before he signs any deals on the dotted line.
But this new cautious spirit
didnt stop Nanulik MLA James Arvaluk from asking Picco to state exactly
when construction on a new home for the handicapped will get under way this
summer in Chesterfield Inlet.
"I am getting antsy
here. The anxiety has developed over a couple of years," Arvaluk told the
legislature.
This new residence would
replace St. Theresas Hospital, where the Catholic Diocese of Churchill
has looked after the eight handicapped residents since the 1970s. Two years
ago, Bishop Reynald Rouleau told the Nunavut government that the Catholic Church
wanted to transfer the service contract for their care to the territory.
But Picco said he isnt
ready to make any commitments yet on a proposal submitted by the Chesterfield
Inlet Development Corporation for a replacement facility and service.
He said the development
corporations proposal is too costly, and his department is trying to see
how the costs for the proposal can be reduced.
"It fell outside the
scope of the budgeted dollars that we had available," Picco said in the
legislature.
Picco said the proposal
calls for a new 20-bed facility for Chesterfield Inlet instead of a 10-bed facility.
"They wanted to take
more people," Picco told Nunatsiaq News.
But the cost of running
the larger building would also be higher, too. It would bring the daily cost
per resident to $650 a day instead of the current $275 a day.
Overall, the budget would
rise to $4 million a year from $1 million a year.
"I have to work within
the budgeted amount," Picco said.
Picco is also moving cautiously
on finalizing a lease agreement that would see a new boarding home built in
Winnipeg for patients coming from the Kivilliq region.
In November, Picco promised
to make an announcement on the contract within a few weeks.
"It is approximately
three months later," said Baker Lake MLA Glenn McLean, speaking in the
legislature. "Can the minister explain before this House the reason for
the delay in the awarding of the contract for the Winnipeg boarding home? I
know the wheels of justice grind slowly but I didnt expect the wheels
of health to fall off the wagon."
Picco said the award to
the Kivalliq Development Corporation for the Winnipeg boarding home was contested
and reviewed a process that has slowed down its approval.
But again, Picco said he
wants to make sure its a sound, long-term deal for the GN before moving
ahead. When a hospital is eventually built in Rankin Inlet, this facility will
reduce the need for a large boarding home in Winnipeg, he said.
"Because of the length
of time of the lease being proposed by the proponent under the contract, we
have to make sure that we are able to do a long-term lease. I believe they are
asking for a 20-year lease on the new facility they intend to build. So that
is part of the delay. It is not a stalling tactic or anything like that,"
Picco said.
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