Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 01, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A4
A 4 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2012 TOP NEWS winnipegfreepress. com
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C ANADA'S Aboriginal Affairs and
Northern Development minister
said Thursday he cannot say when a
permanent home will be found for flooded-
out members of Lake St. Martin First
Nation.
John Duncan said he'd like to see it happen
" as soon as possible," but the ball is
now in the First Nation's court.
In Winnipeg to meet with First Nations
leaders and attend the opening of a new
aboriginal children's centre, Duncan said
Ottawa is waiting for Lake St. Martin's
chief and council to settle on the location
of a new permanent home.
Complicating matters is the fact the
band is holding elections June 28.
" We can independently set a goal ( on
the timing of the band's relocation) but we
can't move faster than chief and council.
We can't move faster than the practical
realities," he said.
Lake St. Martin has been evacuated
since last spring's major flood. As of this
week, some 1,298 members have been receiving
flood- compensation benefits at an
estimated cost of $ 13,000 a day. That number
will be reduced to 1,128 today as Ottawa
cuts off payments to 170 people it has
determined do not qualify for benefits.
Duncan noted some families have relocated
temporarily to Gypsumville. He
said 20 homes are occupied there and
another 10 are available. The First Nation
is said to be considering at least two
sites for a new permanent home - one on
land adjacent to the current reserve that
was purchased by the province last year.
The other site is some 50 kilometres to the
south.
The provincial government says it is
working with Lake St. Martin to determine
whether at least part of its current
flood- damaged lands could be viable in the
long term. It's undertaking an engineering
study to assess the impact of long- term
flood- mitigation efforts on the community.
The results are expected late this fall.
In the meantime, the province is holding
several hundred hectares of land on
higher ground near the existing community
that is not flood prone. " We purchased
the land in consultation with ( Lake St.
Martin) and should the community wish
to use that land, we will transfer ownership,"
a provincial spokesman said in an
email Thursday.
Meanwhile, Ottawa and Lake St. Martin
First Nation continue to bicker over
whether the band is responsible for verifying
who should qualify for compensation
as a result of last spring's flood. The
federal government holds the First Nation
responsible, while Lake St. Martin argues
it's the Manitoba Native Fire Fighters Association,
which has been contracted by
Ottawa to provide disaster assistance.
- with files from Alexandra Paul
and Mia Rabson
larry. kusch@ freepress. mb. ca
THEY call it Makoonsag - Many
Little Bears.
And on Thursday, many little
bears sat with their mothers on
blankets as a new intergenerational
aboriginal children's centre
had its grand opening with
much pomp and many speeches
on Selkirk Avenue.
Also among the 300 attending
the event were Premier Greg Selinger,
federal Aboriginal Affairs
and Northern Development Canada
Minister John Duncan and a
host of other dignitaries.
The new $ 2.6- million facility,
part of the Urban Circle Training
Centre, includes a 52- space childcare
centre, an early- learning
centre that will serve as a demonstration
site for teaching early
childhood education, the delivery
of a two- year early childhood education
diploma training program
in partnership with Red River
College, and an intergenerational
learning centre featuring space
for cultural and cross- cultural
teachings and other programs.
Makoonsag also features an attractive
green space behind the
building. The alley on the north
side of Selkirk Avenue has been
blocked off in the vicinity of the
children's centre so the kids can
safely go out to play.
Pelagie Thomas, a student and
single mother of three children,
said she is impressed with the facility.
" I like it here, and I don't
like when people misjudge it as a
bad area," she said.
Eleanor Thompson, director of
Urban Circle, said the organization
raised $ 630,000 of the new
facility's cost from the corporate
sector. The Winnipeg Foundation
contributed $ 150,000.
Meanwhile, the provincial government
contributed $ 1.2 million,
the city kicked in $ 118,000 and
the federal government contributed
$ 500,000.
Evacuee timeline
More than 4,000 First Nations
residents were forced
to evacuate their homes in
the spring of 2011. At last
count, about 2,200 people
remain evacuees, about
half of them from Lake St.
Martin.
. May 8, 2011: Evacuations
start, with the first 175 people
to leave the Interlake community
about 225 kilometres
north of Winnipeg.
. May 18, 2011: Evacuees
reach 587. Most are moved
to hotels in Winnipeg, with
seven to hotels in Ashern and
Moosehorn. Provincial plans
called for evacuees to start
moving to new housing on a
former radar base in Gypsumville
by fall.
. Sept. 15, 2011: Canada's
military vetoes Lake St. Martin
request to spend the winter at
the former Kapyong barracks.
. Oct. 3, 2011: Manitoba's
grand chief decries as racist
Air Canada's decision to move
flight crews out of downtown
hotels over rising crime rates
some observers linked to
evacuees.
. Dec. 2, 2011: Plan falls
apart to relocate evacuees
after the province passes on
a bid for 150 houses from a
company that listed the chief
as a director.
. March 16, 2012: A spike in
the number of Lake St. Martin
residents forced by flooding
from their homes and receiving
payouts sparks a federal
probe. A total of 1,268 people
were registered as evacuees.
Tally for evacuees hit $ 40
million. Another $ 83 million
for flood mitigation and $ 5.2
million more to First Nations
for flood recovery.
. April 10: The first 12
families move into Manitoba
Housing at the former radar
base near Gypsumville.
. April 28: Federal officials
identify 170 people as
ineligible for evacuee benefits,
which amount to about $ 100
a day in hotel accommodation
and meals.
. June 1: Evacuees declared
ineligible for payouts are cut
off benefits.
Band to decide on home
Ottawa puts onus
on First Nation
By Larry Kusch
Aboriginal
children's
centre
welcomed
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES
Many Lake St. Martin residents remain displaced after being forced out of their community by last year's flooding.
A_ 06_ Jun- 01- 12_ FP_ 01. indd A4 5/ 31/ 12 10: 07: 52 PM
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