Thank you, Mr. Pokiak. The Minister of Education, Culture and Employment, the Honourable Charles Dent.
Debates of Oct. 21st, 2004
This is page numbers 891 - 922 of the Hansard for the 15th Assembly, 3rd Session. The original version can be accessed on the Legislative Assembly's website or by contacting the Legislative Assembly Library. The word of the day was going.
Topics
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 902
Return To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 902

Charles Dent Frame Lake
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, I know I've talked to the college too about the facilities in Tuk and told them about the Member's interest in seeing those facilities used for training purposes. So I am sure the college is taking a look at whether or not that provides an opportunity. The funding that is part of the Aboriginal Skills Employment Partnership Program will be administered by the committee that has been set up to oversee that sort of funding, but I will make sure that the Education, Culture and Employment representative on the committee keeps the opportunities in mind for regional training that could be offered. Thank you.
Return To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 902
Supplementary To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
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Calvin Pokiak Nunakput
Thank you very much. It's good to see that he will go ahead and follow along with your education individual there. Mr. Speaker, can the Minister guarantee for sure that Tuk has been utilized as...(inaudible)...years ago? An example is Dome Petroleum's base. They had what they called Tuk Tech and they operated out of the two camps during the Dome days, which worked out very well. So will the Minister again guarantee that he will be able to work hard with his department to have some satellite training outside of Inuvik? Thank you.
Supplementary To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903
Further Return To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

Charles Dent Frame Lake
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The Department of Education, Culture and Employment invests about $1.1 million on its own annually to train people in regional settings to assist them to find jobs in the oil and gas field. That will continue and that does take place throughout the region, including communities like Tuk. The ASEP funding is intended to serve all of the regions in which oil and gas is found and in which people may find employment. So there is certainly an intention to make sure training takes place on a regional basis. I can assure the Member that there will be regional training offered both by the Government of the Northwest Territories through ECE programs and through the money that is available through the federal government and partners and ECE, that being through ASEP. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Further Return To Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Question 274-15(3): Use Of Satellite Office Training Facilities
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

The Speaker Paul Delorey
Thank you, Mr. Dent. Supplementary, Mr. Pokiak. Item 7, oral questions. The honourable Member for Tu Nedhe, Mr. Villeneuve.
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

Robert Villeneuve Tu Nedhe
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I'll direct my question to the Minister of Resources, Wildlife and Economic Development, the Honourable Brendan Bell. I know that the action plan for the Protected Areas Strategy has been developed by the NWT Protected Areas Strategy Secretariat since 2002 when it was first initiated. I know that there have been negotiations on some cost-sharing agreements with the federal government and other aboriginal organizations to the tune of $17 million for the Protected Areas Strategy. I wanted to ask the Minister if any cost-sharing agreement has been reached and, if not, when can we see an agreement put in place? Thank you.
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

The Speaker Paul Delorey
Thank you, Mr. Villeneuve. The Minister of Resources, Wildlife and Economic Development, Mr. Bell.
Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
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Brendan Bell Yellowknife South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This is an initiative that we've been working on for some time now and we do currently fund some of the work that the secretariat is doing, but the bigger piece of work that we're looking to fund is in the neighbourhood of $1.5 million over five years. We've been expecting that the federal government would come forward with their money. The NGOs have already indicated that they've got the money ready to go and we impacted the three partners in the PAS. We still don't have a firm signal and firm commitment from the federal government as to their contribution. I think at this point we've decided that we may not, in fact, be able to wait for that and we're going to have to go forward. So I am putting some work to go in front of our Financial Management Board to seek this funding to continue to support the PAS. Thank you.
Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903
Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

Robert Villeneuve Tu Nedhe
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I thank the Minister for that response. Something of this nature I guess in a Protected Areas Strategy, you're debt ratio to the end cross-referenced with the Mackenzie gas project. You know, something like this has to be in place before a project of this magnitude breaks ground and I want to commend the department for contributing $1.5 million over the next five years. But the estimated cost over the five years in the summary of the PSAC action plan is $17.745 million and I just want to ask the Minister if he's approached NGOs or producing groups, for instance, to come up with any funding or being involved in this cost-sharing agreement? Thank you.
Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
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Brendan Bell Yellowknife South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The agreement, as laid out some time ago, sees three partners to the funding: three NGOs, the federal government and the GNWT. The three NGOs are WWF, Canada Parks and Wilderness Society, and Ducks Unlimited. Their commitment is for $5.9 million. RWED has committed that we would try to seek $1.5 million over five years, but that was contingent on the federal government stepping to the plate with their contribution, which is the lion's share of the funding. As I've said, we don't have that commitment yet, but we are working to see what kinds of pieces of this agreement we can fund until that commitment is realized. Thank you.
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903
Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

Robert Villeneuve Tu Nedhe
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I guess maybe I just want to exchange my form of questions. I want to ask the Minister if the Protected Areas Strategy action plan includes monitoring and feedback to this government and the federal government on a semi-annual basis or even on a monthly basis on how the planning process carried out and what's developing to date. Thank you.
Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 903

Brendan Bell Yellowknife South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Well, as one of the funding partners, we are intimately involved I
would say on a daily basis with the work the secretariat is carrying out. Obviously we do receive feedback as to how that work is continuing. Work is underway, work is going forward. We rely, I think as the Member knows, on communities and regional groups to identify the candidate areas for protection. We are looking to protect culturally and ecologically-sensitive areas and so this really is grassroots community driven, but, yes, we are involved on a daily basis and do receive feedback as to the results that are being achieved through the secretariat. Thank you.
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
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Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904

Robert Villeneuve Tu Nedhe
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I just wanted to point out that I know that a lot of the candidate areas and these community groups have other avenues in which to establish protected areas; for example, through Parks Canada, Environment Canada and through the territorial government through their own protected areas legislation that they already have in place. I want to know what priority does this Protected Areas Strategy action plan have over any of these other avenues, which could be easier to work with for these candidate-selected areas that these organizations want. Thank you.
Supplementary To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904

Brendan Bell Yellowknife South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I think we can see this as a comprehensive plan for the entire territory. We know that this pipeline isn't confined to one region, one community, one area. We have to understand that the impacts are throughout the whole region, the cumulative impacts of the project. The impacts on all these regions are important to take into consideration. So, yes, there are other processes underway that are driven by land claims organizations and those are important as well, but this is one that's very comprehensive and involves all of the groups up and down the valley. Because of that, the nature of this plan, we think that it's very important and continue to support this and make it one of our highest priorities as a government. Thank you.
Further Return To Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Question 275-15(3): Protected Areas Strategy
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904

The Speaker Paul Delorey
Thank you, Mr. Bell. Item 7, oral questions. The honourable Member for Nahendeh, Mr. Menicoche.
Question 276-15(3): Status Of GNWT's Socioeconomic Agreement
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904

Kevin A. Menicoche Nahendeh
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. My question today is for the honourable Minister of Resources Wildlife and Economic Development. The machine has begun in terms of the proponents filing their documents to build the Mackenzie Valley gas pipeline project. I would like to ask the Minister where is the department at in terms of our role in developing our socioeconomic development agreement. Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker.
Question 276-15(3): Status Of GNWT's Socioeconomic Agreement
Item 7: Oral Questions
Page 904

The Speaker Paul Delorey
Thank you, Mr. Menicoche. The Minister of Resources, Wildlife and Economic Development, Mr. Bell.