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June 21, 2002
Travelling wildlife committee
wraps up tour
The next step: writing
the new act
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Joe
Tigullaraq, facilitator for the seven-person wildlife panel that just wound
up its three-month tour of Nunavut communities.
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Public consultations on
a new Wildlife Act for Nunavut wrapped up in Iqaluit June 14, after a seven-person
committee visited 25 communities in three months.
Now the committee, made
up of representatives from the Nunavut governments department of sustainable
development, the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board and Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.
will deliver their findings to lawyers responsible for writing the landmark
bill.
The committee sought public
input on a total of 14 recommendations drafted by panel members.
In Iqaluit, debate focused
on assignment rights, rigid export permits, hunter education programs and the
definition of "inhumane."
"Why include [the
word] if we cant agree on how to define it?" asked Madeleine Redfern.
Under the current act,
written in the early 1970s by the Northwest Territories government, its
an offence to chase a caribou by snowmobile for photography purposes. However,
it is not an offence to chase caribou in the same way when hunting.
"Some possible reasons
for including harassment provisions in the new act are to prevent aircraft,
photographers, tourists or others from harassing animals and to require hunters
to use more humane methods when hunting animals," a discussion paper on
the new act says.
Joe Tigullaraq, the panels
facilitator, stressed that the panels recommendations will reflect the
concerns of people throughout Nunavut. He said members will work closely with
the lawyers writing the act.
"We have 25 communities
in Nunavut. What we heard in Iqaluit is not the final [word]," he said.
In the case of conflicting
opinions, the majority opinion will rule, he said.
Perhaps the greatest obstacle
is finding a balance between acknowledging the hunting rights of Nunavuts
20,000 beneficiaries, as set out in the Nunavut land claims agreement, and that
of the several thousand non-Inuit and sport hunters who harvest wildlife each
year.
"The hunters have
been very appreciative of being asked for their input. I think it will make
a lot of difference," said Tigullaraq.
MLAs are expecting to see
a draft of the act when the assembly sits this fall.
Public comments can be
filed as late as August.
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