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August 2, 2002
Life after Nanisivik
Where will the community
of Arctic Bay turn for employment after the mine is gone?
DENISE
RIDEOUT
ARCTIC BAY Yellow
dump trucks loaded with minerals dug from the rocks around Nanisivik drive down
a gravel road toward the mill at the mine site.
The mill, a red building,
is full of people, and the machines inside it are buzzing with activity.
This is the last summer
mine workers will dig underground for mineral-rich rocks, drive truckloads of
them to the mill to be processed and then load ore onto ships destined for southern
Canada.
On Sept. 30, after 26 years
of mining in the picturesque area facing Strathcona Sound on the northern tip
of Baffin Island, Nanisivik Mine will shut down.
The low world zinc prices
forced the mines owner, CanZinco Ltd., to pull the plug on its operations
four years earlier than planned. The dwindling ore reserves there also played
a role in the companys decision to stop mining.
When the mine closes this
fall, about 15 employees from Arctic Bay will be out of work. There are few
other employment prospects in the small town of 700.
"There are Arctic
Bay people employed at the mine who live in the town site. What is going to
happen to them and their homes?" Joanasie Akumalik, Arctic Bays mayor,
asked at a public hearing in the community July 24.
"There are about 15
local people working at the mine. On top of that we have at least 10 other jobs
that are created as a result of the mine operations. Can you imagine what it
means to Arctic Bay to lose 25 jobs that support people in this community?"
Theres little doubt
among Arctic Bay and Nanisivik residents that the mine brought some good employment
opportunities to the area.
"Since the mine was
opened it has helped over the years to employ people in the community,"
said longtime resident Tommy Tatapuapik. "They have trained heavy-equipment
operators, and people learned job skills at the mine."
But those jobs and training
opportunities are in their last days.
After the mines closure,
there will be even fewer jobs available for young people in Arctic Bay, residents
said.
"What are the prospects
of those students when they finish school?" asked Levi Barnabas. "They
have no prospects. The only jobs there are working as a cashier in the stores
or as stock boys," he said.
"You dig things up
every day"
Some of Nanisivik Mines
Inuit workers, sitting around a table in the mines dome-shaped cafeteria,
say they dont have new jobs lined up for the fall.
Three young men shrug their
shoulders when asked what theyll do once their jobs end in two months
time. Andy Ootova, who has worked in the mill for the past year, said he wont
terribly miss a job he describes as "you dig things up every day and you
get dirty every day."
"Ill look for
a job again," Ootova said. "If not, Ill go back to college."
The three finish their
meal and head back to work. Paulossie Oqallak, 37, sets down his plate of roast
beef and mashed potatoes and reminisces about the opening of the mine. He was
11 years old at the time. "We had a lot of fun. We used to come over here
[from Arctic Bay] to swim."
After 11 years at Nanisivik,
working his way up from a mechanics helper to a motor vehicle mechanic,
Oqallak will be out of a job in October.
After that, Oqallak will
likely move out of Arctic Bay and head to the South in search of a job.
Others in Arctic Bay are
hopeful the mines closure will bring them work.
Once mining stops this
fall, there will be two years of clean-up and reclamation work up for grabs.
Residents and political
leaders are urging the mining company to look to Arctic Bay for the labourers
it will need to carry out the extensive clean up of the mine and town sites,
expected to take two years.
Rebekah Uqi Williams, MLA
for Arctic Bay and Nanisivik, stands near the mines conveyor belt and
dock and demands CanZinco tell the community if they will get any of the clean-up
jobs.
"The community needs
to have a clear picture of how many people will be employed and if the people
of Arctic Bay will be employed," Williams said.
But CanZinco officials
couldnt give her a concrete answer. Thats because the clean-up plan
hasnt been finalized. The mining company is waiting to hear what the Nunavut
government wants to do with old mine equipment, vehicles and buildings, such
as the church, school and health centre.
If the company and government
come to an agreement not to demolish the buildings, the nature of the clean-up
project will change.
"Until we know how
much work well have to do, we dont know if contractors will do it
or if well do it ourselves," said Bill Heath, general manager of
the Nanisivik mine.
"It would be beneficial
for all involved if many of the employees, or all the employees, come from Arctic
Bay," he told Williams.
Akumalik, admits many hope
residents will get the clean-up jobs.
But as one mine closes
in the area, another one is on the horizon. Kennecott-Twin Mining says theres
diamond potential in nearby Jackson Inlet.
"Well, we have that
other mining going, the proposed diamond mine," Akumalik said.
"That will keep us
alive, I think."
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