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March 14, 2003
Iqaluit HTA to build shelters
along Pangnirtung trail
City helps with $9,000
grant
CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
The 400 kilometre trail
from Iqaluit to Pangnirtung will soon to be outfitted with several cabins for
stranded snowmobilers.
City council, at its regular
meeting Feb. 25, voted to award the Amarok Hunters and Trappers Association
$9,000 for the construction of two cabins along the Pangnirtung Trail.
The money is the last of
the funds available this year through the Community Initiatives Program, which
supports local economic activity.
Council turned down a second
proposal for CIP funds put forward by Nunavut Productions.
Nunavut Productions asked
for $10,000, to be used as prize money in this years Snow Challenge snowmobile
race, beginning March 29. It was NPs second request for money from the
city. It has already received $10,000 this year.
Mayor John Matthews explained
that council felt the money could benefit the community more if it were in the
HTAs hands.
"Its felt that
the shelter is needed by the residents. Those who get out sometimes find themselves
stranded and could benefit by having the shelter. It could conceivably save
someones life," Matthews said.
Along with the cash from
the city, the Amorok HTA raised enough money through Arctic Circle Construction
and the Nunavut Investment Group to build two additional cabins, for a total
of four insulated emergency shelters.
"Were going
to pre-fab them here in a week or two, then transport them with the help of
several volunteers, people who use the trail quite a bit," said David Ell,
the chair of the Amarok HTA.
The association also got
money from the Kakivak Association to hire 10 unemployed Inuit for 22.5 days
of work. The group could start work as soon as next week, Ell said.
Weather conditions along
the trail often change suddenly, turning an already challenging and isolated
route into a life-threatening journey.
"More people are using
the trail and caribou are going farther and farther out," Ell said. "The
cabins are good for emergency situations, and for courier services travelling
back and forth between Iqaluit and Pang."
The risk to life and limb
on such a journey is a well-known fact to Mike Erving, president of the snowmobile
association.
In almost perfect ice conditions,
the round trip that Erving made last winter was about 770 kilometres. He says
the cabins are "definitely a good thing to have."
"My experience going
between [Iqaluit] and Kimmirut, theres been a few times when weather has
come in and, Ill tell you, its nice to have the shelter," Erving
said.
"On the Pang trail,
theres really only one cabin, aside from an outpost. There is a rock quarry
there as well, but theyre all more so on the Pang side of the peninsula."
The downside, Erving said,
is that cabins may encourage inexperienced people to use the trail and end up
in real trouble.
"It is something you
still have to have skill and knowledge to do," he warned. "The majority
of the youth who just hop up and go are from here and should know better. I
find people take offense when theyre told to register and insure their
snowmobile and obey the trails."
But if the cabins are placed
at a distance where people who use the land properly can access them, "thats
great," Erving said.
"I know some of the
cabins closer to town have just been literally trashed full of bullet
holes, feces, empty alcohol containers of many sorts."
The new cabins will be
about 12-feet by 12-feet, and Ell hopes to equip them with stoves sometime in
the future. Hes also anticipating that the more friendly trail will increase
business in and out of Iqaluit.
"Hopefully there will
be more people using the trail coming in from Pang and buying more stuff. Besides,
we need more roads. Theres never enough roads."
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