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January 3, 2003
A year of pride and turmoil
for Iqaluit
2002 in Iqaluit
Rannva Simonsen
examines a glass of treated water in March, part of the citys "healthy
homes" project. The water is processed from household waste water and used
for flushing toilets.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Nunatsiaq News
Iqaluit residents will
remember 2002 as the year when the Arctic Winter Games and the visit of Queen
Elizabeth II brought recognition and pride to the people of Nunavuts capital
city.
But theyll also remember
it as a year when residents fought each other over how the community should
develop.
January
The City of Iqaluit
proposes to borrow between $24 million and $35 million from the Nunavut government
to pay for badly needed capital projects. It would mean a property tax increase
of up to 30 per cent. Iqaluit ratepayers must approve the citys plan to
go into debt. By the end of 2002, that vote still hadnt taken place.
City council announces
it will close Iqaluits oldest skating and hockey arena by the spring.
With the new Arctic Winter Games complex in Iqaluit, there isnt enough
activity to support two arenas, council says.
Iqaluits hotels
are all booked up for the Arctic Winter Games in March, so the city asks residents
to open their homes to visitors. The zero vacancy rate worries organizers of
the AWG event.
February
The Iqaluit District
Education Authority recommends that schools send students home on days when
teachers are absent. The current practice is to have principals and gym teachers
fill in for absent instructors.
Frozen water pipes
leave residents in the Brown Row area without water for an entire week. The
-40 cold freezes the main line that supplies the 15 houses.
Iqaluit starts researching
no-smoking policies in other municipalities in hopes of drafting one for the
city. Restaurant and bar owners say the smoking ban should be introduced gradually.
Iqalungmiut make
a plea to Ed Picco, MLA for Iqaluit East, to save the Arnaitok arena from being
shut down in April. They say the old rink serves residents living in downtown
Iqaluit.
March
Iqaluit hosts the
biggest sporting and cultural event in its history: the Arctic Winter Games.
More than 900 participants, including athletes, coaches and cultural performers,
from nine circumpolar regions arrive in the city for the March 17 to 23 event.
Iqaluit co-hosts the games with Nuuk, Greenland.
After months of
begging the territorial and federal governments for money to buy an incinerator,
city council halts its plans to install an incinerator at the dump. The incinerator
will cost too much, council says, and it may be hazardous to residents
health.
Support trickles
in for the citys plan to create "healthy homes." The system
takes household sewage, treats it, and then pumps it back into peoples
tanks to be used for flushing toilets. Its hoped the project will save
money for homeowners and the municipality.
Tammaattivik, the
medical boarding home in Iqaluit, bans a 21-year-old Pond Inlet man after he
was found guilty of sexually assaulting two women who were staying there.
April
Fearing the Kamotik
Inn is a fire, health and safety hazard, Nunavuts fire marshall closes
the popular restaurants doors. It is in violation of 58 health and safety
codes. The owners fix up the problems and the restaurant opens later in the
month.
Iqaluit residents
shoot down some of the suggested names for the citys streets. Eva Aariak,
Nunavuts language commissioner, worries the simple Inuktitut street names
were chosen for the sake of non-Inuit who may have difficulty pronouncing Inuktitut
words.
Iqalungmiut weigh
in on the Nunavut Liquor Act debate. The city hosts public meetings to get an
Iqaluit perspective on proposed changes to the way liquor is distributed in
the territory.
Iqaluit gets one
step closer to having walking trails in the city. The designer unveils a map
showing trails in the downtown core that would cater to people walking to offices
or stores in the area.
May
The city requires
Baffin Building Supplies to pay to repair potholes that developed over the winter
in the pavement it laid on the Airport Road last summer.
Members of the Amarok
Hunters and Trappers Association reject a ballot regarding hunting assignment
rights. They were supposed to vote on whether Inuit can assign hunting rights
to other Inuit and non-Inuit, but they say the ballot is densely worded.
Iqalungmiut sign
a petition opposing the proposed names for the citys streets. Longtime
Inuit residents say that naming roads after people is a qallunaat practice,
the Inuktitut names are too simplistic and the project is meant for qallunaat
who are new to the city.
Taxi drivers oppose
the idea of bringing a public transportation system to Iqaluit for fear that
theyll lose customers. Residents, however, are eager for a cheaper way
of getting around town.
June
A study of Iqaluits
water and sewage systems urges the city to increase the capacity of the water
treatment plant and take a serious look at Lake Geraldine to see if it has enough
water to sustain Iqaluits rapidly growing population.
Because of worries
about the depleted stocks of Arctic char in the Sylvia Grinnell River, the Amarok
hunters and trappers association bans boating and fishing there. This summer,
the department of fisheries and oceans begins a study to update information
on char stocks.
City council nixes
a developers plan to put up a 48-unit apartment building because it doesnt
like the proposed size and look of the building. Kenn Harper of NewNorth Developments
(formerly Urbco), the developer behind the plan, criticizes council for rejecting
badly needed housing in Iqaluit.
Planning for Iqaluits
future growth sparks lots of debate in the city. Longtime residents no longer
want Iqaluit to grow in such a haphazard way, and building developers say city
council makes them jump through hoops before they can build apartments and offices.
After listening
to emotional pleas from hockey players, skaters and coaches, Iqaluit city council
decides to hold off on its plan to shut down the Arnaitok arena. It hopes corporate
sponsors will help pay to keep the rink operating.
July
The Iqaluit Chamber
of Commerce slams Iqaluit city council for what it says are badly needed housing
developments. The Chamber says that small business are being deprived of affordable
space in the downtown core, and residents are deprived of housing.
Consultants recommend
that the city use bylaw officers to direct traffic at some of Iqaluits
busier intersections.
Three missing boaters
are saved after Coast Guard staff in Iqaluit overhear a radio message saying
that the outboard motor on their 22-foot canoe broke down.
Iqaluit city council
passes its street-naming bylaw on July 23.
August
The City of Iqaluit
is fined $100,000 under the Fisheries Act after pleading guilty to one count
of discharging sewage into Koojesse Inlet. About 822,000 litres of human waste
overflowed into the inlet on five separate occasions between April 23 and July
4, 2001.
The Nanook taxi
dispatch and garage are destroyed by fire, leaving five people homeless. Sparks
from a grinder landed on rags on the floor and started a blaze that quickly
engulfed the building.
An engineers
report shows the city must pay almost $4 million, on top of the $7 million already
paid to get its sewage plant up and running. The plant, which was intended to
replace the citys sewage lagoon, was in trouble as far back as 2000 when
it was built. Engineers discovered leaks in the walls of the concrete tanks
and work was halted.
A report on the
citys public works department calls for changes to the way it provides
water, sewer and garbage services. "The Public Works Capacity Review"
says the best way to improve services is for some to be contracted out to local
businesses and to boost the workers morale.
Careless treatment
of household garbage is hampering Iqaluits recycling program. Non-recyclable
items are ending up in blue bags destined for the citys recycling bins.
Organizers of the recycling program estimate two of every three blue bags are
contaminated.
City officials prepare
to crack down on tax evaders. The city is owed $1.3 million in back taxes and
officials say they are prepared to go to court to recoup the money.
City councillor
Simon Nattaq resigns on Aug. 12 after five years of service. A warrant for Nattaqs
arrest is issued the previous week after he fails to appear in court in connection
with a sexual assault charge against him.
City council approves
development on the Road to Nowhere under the condition that neighbours are consulted.
Jomanic-Can planned to build two duplexes and a 10-plex but the companys
president, George DAoust says the condition given by council was, in effect,
a refusal of the development. He says the company will probably scrap the project
and return the land to the city, adding its becoming harder to build in
Iqaluit.
At a meeting on
Aug. 27, about 21 members of Iqaluits Amarok Hunters and Trappers Association
vote in favour of allowing Inuit to transfer harvesting rights to non-Inuit
spouses. To do so beneficiaries must complete a promise to assignment form that
then must be approved by the HTA. Only 21 of a possible several hundred voters
take part in the vote.
The citys
engineering department tells Lower Base landlords and homeowners how much it
will cost them to connect to the citys water and sewer pipes. Residents
can expect to pay between $5,500 and $13,500 each, while the city will put a
$300,000 grant from the GN toward the cost of extending the pipes from the main
utilidor pipe to homeowners property lines.
After hearing recommendations
from the Amarok Hunters and Trappers Association, the Department of Fisheries
and Oceans sets new rules for fishing at the mouth of the Sylvia Grinnell River.
September
Iqaluits first
preschool opens Sept. 3 with classes beginning Sept. 9. The preschool is bilingual,
with Inuktitut lessons running twice a week and another class for English-speaking
children twice a week.
Kenn Harper, one
of several shareholders in Northern Property Real Estate Investment Trust, says
he will sue the city for lost development fees after council rejects his companys
apartment proposal. The building proposed by Ninety North Ltd. would have housed
48 apartment units and 16,000 square feet of office space. City council rejects
the proposal, stating it doesnt like the size and look of the building.
Harper says council made its decision on personal taste, not planning bylaws.
Gordon Barnes, the
executive director of the Oqota emergency shelter, quits his job and leaves
town, disheartened by the increase in crime in Iqaluit.
The city threatens
to cut off water delivery to customers with overdue water bills. The city is
owed more than $200,000 from about 440 households and businesses.
More than 60 per
cent of students at Inuksuk High School who completed a basic Inuktitut literacy
test this past spring couldnt answer questions based on a reading exercise.
Administered by Arctic College students, the test results show that of 180 students
tested, only 82 felt comfortable taking a basic reading comprehension test and
of the 82 students, 62 per cent are considered illiterate or semi-literate in
Inuktitut by the test administrators,
The Transportation
Safety Board releases a report on a Sept. 22, 2000, incident where a Boeing
727 landed and slid off the left side of the airport runway in Iqaluit. Investigators
who reviewed the accident say the First Air pilots werent given an accurate
report of the runways condition, nor were they updated when the weather
worsened.
An inquest into
the death of Nakasuk School principal Hal Richards gives no answers why the
52-year-old ended his life, but makes 16 recommendations aimed mostly at how
the department of education should handle teachers accused of abusing students.
October
City council drafts
a 20-year vision for Iqaluit, but the rules and guidelines must go through public
consultations before they can be adopted and become an official plan. The plan
will outline where new housing units can be built, what plots of land should
be protected, where commercial, government and industrial buildings should sit
and provide guidelines for what new buildings should look like. The document
suggests an area should be designated a "capital district," where
government buildings and offices would be clustered together.
Queen Elizabeth
II and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, touch down in Iqaluit Oct. 4 for
a two-and-a-half-hour visit kicking off their Cross-Canada Jubilee Tour. Gov.
Gen. Adrienne Clarkson and other dignitaries are on the tarmac to meet the Queens
plane when it arrives at exactly 12:01 p.m.
The city wants to
create a referral centre that would direct people to health, employment, housing
and education services. A public meeting is held Oct. 5 to discuss the project
and residents at the meeting come out in full support of such a centre.
Popular weight-loss
program Weight Watchers comes to the city for the first time. Country foods
are given point values, as well as other foods available in the citys
grocery stores to help people eat in moderation. A large turnout is expected.
Iqaluit starts its
four-week trial bus program on Oct. 21. For $2 passengers can be taken on two
different routes, Loop A, or Loop B. The number of people using the service
will be counted and a decision made on the feasibility of permanent bus service.
November
Elisapee Sheutiapik
and Doug Lem are elected to fill two vacant seats on Iqaluit city council. Sheutiapik
won 432 votes and Lem 356. Only 31 per cent of Iqaluits 2,440 residents
cast ballots.
Construction of
a long-awaited footbridge across the Sylvia Grinnell River is underway. Canadian
armed forces officers spent two weeks paddling supplies across the river from
Oct. 15 to 30. The bridge should be completed by September 2003.
The citys
new garbage compactor makes its debut at the city dump. The compactor crushes
garbage into smaller units before its covered by dirt, which means that
the open burning of garbage will be reduced.
Canada Post begins
door-to- door parcel delivery on Dec. 1.
December
Inuksuk High School
will get a facelift and Aqsarniit Middle School will double in size as part
of the Nunavut department of educations five-year capital plan. Inuksuk
will get $19 million between 2003 and 2008 and Aqsarniit will receive $7.5 million
over the same period.
The government of
Nunavut will give the city of Iqaluit $7.2 million for capital projects.
A teenage boy wanders
the streets of Iqaluit in the early morning hours of Dec. 7, firing between
eight to 10 shots from a rifle. Police arrest a 17-year-old boy the next day,
and charge him with a variety of firearms offences.
The Nunavut Construction
Corporation proposes a privatized form of development in which the city would
give NCC the right to develop a subdivision and sell lot-leases.
The GN and the City
of Iqaluit sign a five-year, $31-million deal to help the capital city pay for
much-needed infrastructure.
The City of Iqaluits
budget shows that ratepayers will pay more property tax in 2003. Property taxes
will go up by 2.25 per cent in 2003, while water and sewage fees will increase
by five per cent.
On Dec. 24, Ivan
Kilabuk Joamie is released from custody after Crown prosecutors stay a charge
of first-degree murder laid against him on Dec. 16, saying that the evidence
doesnt justify prosecution. Kilabuk had been charged in connection with
the homicide of 13-year-old Jennifer Naglingniq, whose body was found at her
home in the early morning hours of Dec. 6. RCMP say 11 police officers are still
working on the case, but they have yet to charge another person with the offence.
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