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April 12, 2002
Sports ministers draft new policy
Healthy living initiative
to act as a model for Nunavuts own sport policy
MIRIAM
HILL
Provincial and territorial
ministers responsible for sport met in Iqaluit last weekend and endorsed the
countrys first Canadian Sport Policy, a document that will act as a model
for Nunavuts own sport policy.
The ministers meet once
a year to discuss their portfolio and Nunavuts capital city hosted the
group, which included Paul DeVillers, the federal secretary of state for amateur
sport.
Manitok Thompson, the minister
in charge of Sport Nunavut, said the policy is a good one and its guidelines
and curriculum will be used to set up the territorys policy in the future.
The policy is meant to give direction to leaders to create a more effective
and transparent sport system, to underscore the importance of sport to health
and improve the sport experience "from playground to podium."
Although the ministers
said 13 priorities and 22 actions have been developed directed at a number of
issues, such as increasing the publics understanding of and participation
in sport and enhancing Aboriginal sport development, no concrete examples of
what actions will be undertaken were available.
"For Nunavut [a sport
policy] gives us more bullets to say that theres a lot more diabetics
now, more cancer, but we can avoid that if we can get into recreation, into
sports, into exercise. This is what this is about," Thompson said. "Maybe
were spending a lot of money on health issues when we can avoid it if
we can get into exercise and sports and healthy active living."
The link between sport
and health was reiterated the next day when the ministers made a presentation
to the Romanow Commission on the Future of Health Care, also in Iqaluit to hear
submissions.
No extra money was promised
from the federal government at the sport ministers meeting, but Thompson
said it was beneficial to have the ministers visit Nunavut since the countrys
newest territory has its own specific challenges when it comes to infrastructure
needs.
"When you talk about
infrastructure needs in Nunavut, as a politician, youre really talking
about priority housing, health centres, roads, water, sewage and so on. And
a lot of the times our recreation facilities are not really a priority, its
more a cosmetic thing," she said.
"I was able to say
maybe if we had a separate pocket altogether for our recreation facilities that
would help out youth a lot and even our population. For example, you cant
really jog outside in the middle of winter, unless you want to freeze your lungs."
While most communities
in Nunavut have arenas, Thompson said they are not being used to their full
extent because of global warming. The way the arenas are constructed requires
cold weather for the ice to freeze inside.
"If we were to put
more money into recreation facilities, make them concrete, or something with
artificial ice, then people can roller blade in them," she said. "Right
now weve closed them for the rest of the year."
Thompson would also like
to see a program for swimming pools in the territory, but she said right now
its not a priority for government.
"Across Canada, theyre
finding that if we exercise more we have healthier communities," she said.
"We can cut the cost down on people getting sick if people would exercise
more and get into active living."
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