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August 2, 2002
Ng lobbies Ottawa for infrastructure
funds
Money would go to building
hospital, health centres and road and port project
JANE
GEORGE
Instead of lobbying the
federal government for a larger territorial budget, Nunavut is now asking Ottawa
for specific amounts of money to help pay for big-ticket projects.
The high-priority projects
include the construction of a new hospital in Iqaluit and two health centres
in Rankin Inlet and Cambridge Bay, as well as a road and port that would link
Bathurst Inlet to potential mining sites.
Nunavuts finance
minister, Kelvin Ng, was in Ottawa recently to pitch these projects to the new
federal minister of finance, John Manley.
"I felt quite positive
coming out of the meeting," Ng said in a telephone interview from Bathurst
Inlet. "You have to substantiate what you require. I think being more project-specific
is more valuable."
Ng wants $108 million for
the Bathurst road and port project. This money would come from Ottawas
$2-billion Strategic Infrastructure Fund thats overseen by Manley.
Ng said the Bathurst road
and port project meets all the funds criteria.
"It makes sense not
just for Nunavut, but for Canada as well because it will add to the gross domestic
product of the country if it comes to fruition," Ng said.
The 200-kilometre road
and port, expected to cost $250 million, would provide a transportation corridor
between the Arctic coast and the Kitikmeot regions mineral-rich interior.
The projects backers
say it would spark the development of promising mining properties in the region,
including the Izok Lake lead, zinc and nickel deposit 265 kilometres southeast
of Kugluktuk.
During his meeting with
Manley, Ng also presented the GNs case for a federal contribution to the
hospital and two regional health centres that the GN has promised to build.
The $41 million Ng wants
is about half the total cost of the three facilities.
Ng said the GN intends
to go ahead with construction, in partnership with Nunavuts three Inuit-owned
regional development firms. But money from Ottawa would help cover the GNs
portion of the costs.
Since 1997, officials with
the governments of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut have told the public
that the Qikiqtaaluk, Sakku and Kitikmeot development corporations would build
the facilities and the government would lease them back.
Along with Nunasi Corporation,
those three Inuit companies now own their own construction company Nunavut
Construction Corporation.
But after the auditor general
of Canada criticized GN leasing practices last year, the GN reviewed its leases.
Ng said the new leasing
policy, still in a draft stage, has guided the proposed deals for the construction
of the hospital and health centres.
Ng said he is confident
these leases would pass any scrutiny. He expects to hear from Ottawa by the
end of the year.
Premier Paul Okalik was
also to lobby for funds for the projects at the annual Canadian premiers
meeting this week in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
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