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December 6, 2002
Chesterfield Inlet group
home to undergo transformation
GN capital budget contains
$4.25 million for new facility
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
The 70-year-old Pimakslirvik
group home in Chesterfield Inlet will become a modern extended-care facility
for severely disabled Nunavummiut once the Government of Nunavut approves the
$4.25 million needed to build a new facility.
The legislative assembly
passed Nunavuts 2003-04 capital budget this week. The financial plan awaits
third and final reading in the new year.
Health Minister Ed Picco
said the new facility will be built adjacent to an existing property overlooking
Hudson Bay. The fate of the old structure is up to the Catholic diocese, which
owns the building.
The new facility will be
bigger, better equipped and able to house more residents.
"Were hoping
to repatriate some of the patients we have in the South. Were hoping to
increase the capacity and were working that out in the architectural design
of the building," Picco said.
The sturdy but aging 10-bed
facility once known as St. Theresas was built as a hospital
in 1931. The Catholic diocese and the Grey Nuns ran the facility until 2001
when, as a cost-saving measure, they asked the department of health and social
services to take over.
Pimakslirvik residents
are from all over Nunavut.
Construction on the new
building is scheduled for the spring. The doors wont open until early
2004.
Elna Eidsivik, one of two
nurse managers at Pimakslirvik, said the old building is safe but outdated.
"By the standards
of today you need walk-in bathrooms with wheelchair accessibility and new modern
lifts where you can lift [residents] from one chair to another. We just dont
have the room for that sort of thing here, because its an old building
and it was never designed for that. Theres no way we can put that sort
of equipment into this building," she said.
Eidsivik said staff are
eager for a new facility. And while the building may be seen as merely a hospice
for the disabled, Eidsivik said Pimakslirvik means a lot to its long-term residents,
ranging in age from eight months to 40 years.
"Their life is here,"
she said.
Last year the GN invested
$40,000 in minor upgrades such as new fuel storage equipment, Picco said. Renovating
the building to bring it up to code was not a feasible option.
Nanulik MLA James Arvaluk
has often spoke in the legislative assembly about the need for a new building
one with ramps and a new electrical system to accommodate specialized
lifts.
"The home is very
important to a lot of people, especially the patients. The patients see the
workers as their mothers and fathers," Arvaluk said in a members
statement last year.
Pimakslirviks 30-person
staff of mostly Inuit support workers, cleaners and cooks makes the facility
the largest employer in the non-decentralized community.
The buildings future
was not always so bright.
Two years ago, the GN considered
closing the home when the Catholic Church made its decision to withdraw. Baker
Lake, where a similar home exists, was identified as a potential new site.
However, the health department
has since decided to finance the multi-million dollar complex, which costs about
$1 million annually to run.
"Everything seems
to have come together. [Pimakslirvik] is the largest employer in the community.
It was essential we keep the service there. Plus, were doing this in partnership
with Chesterfield Inlet Development Corporation, which is a locally owned business,"
Picco said.
The development corporation
was awarded the building contract this year. Construction is scheduled to begin
next summer, with the arrival of supplies on the July sealift.
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