Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chair, just following up on the Minister’s response to my question, I have been here for going on 14 years and I think I heard every Minister since then give the same comment that you’re just giving saying: Oh, it’s going to be taken care of and the
issue is going to be solved, even. Talk to your colleagues who were former Ministers of Health and you can go through the archives and you will probably get a stack of paper three feet high on this issue.
I think that for you to state it here on record that this problem is going to be taken care of by snapping their fingers, I am sorry. That is wishful thinking. For me, unless I actually see a warm body sitting in the seat of the mental health office in Fort McPherson providing day-to-day services and having someone drive up from Inuvik or flying from Inuvik once a month and then fly back to Inuvik the same evening or drive back to Inuvik the same evening, that is not health care services.
The same thing applies in regard to other taxi services that are being provided to communities in the Beaufort-Delta. I heard my colleague from Nunakput mention this morning that elderly patients basically are having to be told, well, you either come into the health centre and get your name on the list and we will put you down when the doctor comes in once a month. Basically if you are on the list you get in. If you are not on the list, sorry, you have to wait until next month. To me, that is not health care services.
I think we have to find a system that works for small communities, in isolated communities and First Nation communities. The quality of health care for First Nations people in the Northwest Territories is below par when it comes to the statistics that show that aboriginal health is deteriorating compared to the rest of the non-aboriginal population in Northwest Territories. To me, that is a grim statistic that we shouldn’t be proud of. It shows it right across Canada.
I think if you start looking at the increase of cancer cases in our communities, diabetes and other ailments, that could be prevented by good health care, preventative health care measures in communities, having a nurse in a community, having a mental health worker in a community, having home care services, having people there that come home with cancer saying, sorry, there is nothing we can do; go home. But having care for them, aftercare, so that when they get home there are people there to take care of these people.
I get calls from people quite regularly. I got a call just a couple days ago from a young lady that her mom just passed away with cancer a couple of months ago. Now her dad has cancer and is dying. Basically she is taking care of him and she has three kids. She is trying to get help from income support to support them in food, and keep the lights on, and keep the home, but they won’t help her. She is calling me and I’m talking to the chief. We are trying to find ways around assisting people that
have these ailments in our communities and find a system that really works. That has got dysfunctional to a point where they have to start calling the chief and MLA to solve these problems. There is no need for that.
I think, as a government, we cannot allow bureaucracies, either health boards or whatnot, to justify their existence by going into deficits every year and not providing services to communities. For myself, I am frustrated with this issue, because we shouldn’t have to talk about it here in the Legislative Assembly every time there is an issue.
As the Minister of Health, I hoped that you would take this issue seriously, like the Minister of Justice did with policing. I think that, as a health care provider, these services are services that aboriginal people are fighting for and that is why they want self-government, because this government couldn’t do any worse than what we are doing here today.
I would like to ask the Minister exactly when can you guarantee me that there will be a hot, warm, cozy body in Fort McPherson providing mental health care services so people can walk into an office, know that there will be somebody there that will basically provide them that service, and also that there will be the expenditure that you mentioned? You mentioned $75,000. I was just looking through my notes here. McPherson could provide mental health services with $185,000, so I would like to know how you came up with a number of $75,000. But looking at the government information I got from you, it says that you spent $185,000 on mental health services in Fort McPherson.