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May 10, 2002
Kivalliq hunters want compensation
for snowmobile repairs
Its been a hard
winter for hunters and trappers
DENISE
RIDEOUT
The Kivalliq Wildlife Board
is demanding that hunters and trappers be compensated for the money theyve
spent on repairs to snowmobiles damaged by contaminated gas supplied by the
government of Nunavut.
"Im asking Inuit
leaders and government leaders to come up with a program to compensate hunters
and trappers for their losses during this harvesting season," said David
Alagalak, president of the Kivalliq Wildlife Board.
Alagalak said hunters and
trappers in the region were alarmed by how often their snowmobiles pistons,
carburetors and crank shafts were breaking down.
Throughout the winter,
they complained to the Kivalliq Wildlife Board that they were running into problems
with their machines. Alagalak said the situation was riskiest for trappers,
who must travel long distances by snowmobile to check trap-lines.
Getting the machines fixed
was often costly, Alagalak said, and many hunters simply couldnt afford
to pay for the repairs. For those hunters, times were tough because they werent
getting meat for their families or bringing in any income from the sale of furs,
he said.
"This winter I noticed
the spirit of hunters was very heavy," Alagalak said. "Its sad.
Whole families were affected."
Hunters in the Kivalliq
and Baffin regions, as well as local politicians, told the Nunavut government
they suspected it had shipped in a bad supply of gas.
All along, the governments
response was that the gas had been tested before it was shipped and that it
met all regulatory standards. Then, in March, further tests revealed the gas
was missing a chemical that helps keep engines clean.
The Kivalliq Wildlife Board
says it took too long for territorial ministers to take the hunters concerns
seriously.
"The action of the
government wasnt fast enough. A lot of hunters felt they were discriminated
against," Alagalak said.
In an interview on May
3, just hours after the Nunavut government announced that the gas supply in
the Baffin and Kivalliq regions is responsible for the snowmobile break downs,
Alagalak said the Kivalliq Wildlife Board wants to see hunters and trappers
compensated.
"Id like to
pursue a proper allowance to hunters and trappers in our region who suffered
greatly in the harvesting season," he said.
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