March 8, 2002
KRG wants action on police
stations now
Fix our police stations
or we may pull out of policing, KRG says
JANE
GEORGE
The Kativik Regional Government
is upping the ante in its push to see new fire stations built in Nunavik.
"Were saying
we have to address the issue," said KRG chairman Johnny Adams.
If Ottawa and Quebec dont
agree to pay for the new stations by the end of March, the KRG may give six-months
notice that it intends to stop supplying police services to the region.
This would oblige the Quebec
provincial police, the Sûreté du Québec, to take over policing
in all Nunavik communities.
"Its an option
were looking at," Adams said.
The KRG wants 11 new stations
built in Nunavik. These would replace the decrepit, second-hand trailers still
used by the Kativik Regional Police Force in many communities.
To build these new stations,
it would cost $1.5 million a year over 20 years, an expense the provincial and
federal governments would share.
Quebec has agreed to fund
its 45 per cent share of building the new stations and pay for more police officers
but Adams said the federal government doesnt want to commit to
any new money until its time to start talks on renewing Nunaviks
aboriginal policing agreement.
"Quebec agreed in
the next two years we would have an additional 11 officers, and they agreed
to the construction of 11 new police stations over the next three years, but
Canada is holding off until the agreement runs out next year," Adams said.
Last October, inspectors
from the workers health and safety board of Quebec, the Commission de
la santé et la sécurité du travail, closed down two police
stations in Nunavik.
As a result, police in
Puvirnituq relocated their offices to the communitys recreational centre
while Akuliviks sole constable began taking calls in his home.
The CSST also singled out
police stations in Kuujjuaraapik, Umiujaq, Ivujivik and Salluit for repairs.
Most police stations in
Nunavik are trailers, which were bought second-hand in 1995 from the provincial
police force.
"Since they were using
them, we figured they were in decent shape," Adams said.
But Adams has since learned
there had already been complaints made to the CSST about the deplorable state
of the trailers prior to the transfer.
As part of the implementation
of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, the James Bay Cree recently
received an additional $6.8 million to build seven new police stations in their
territory and renovate two others for their native police force.
But the JBNQA doesnt
call for a similar investment in police stations in Nunavik.
In 2000, the KRG was to
build a new police station in Puvirnituq, but it dropped this project due to
a lack of money.
The five-year $32 million
funding agreement signed in 1998 was supposed to help pay for improved police
stations, but due to the expense of meeting stiff building codes, only Inukjuak
received a new station.
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