Thank you. I wasn’t going to speak to this, but I need to jump in here.
I understand the rationale of the questioning of my colleagues; however, Fort Smith and Hay River, first of all, are not right next door to each other. They may both be in the South Slave, but we’re really stretching it to say an hour and a half. You’d have to be driving about 150 miles an hour to get there in an hour and a half.
As far as being back up or taking pressure off of Stanton, it’s a flight of about 30 minutes to get between Hay River and Yellowknife and it’s probably a flight of about 50 minutes between Fort Smith and Yellowknife, so I suppose you could make an argument for all three hospitals would kind of be right next door to each other. Most people who are seeking medical attention are not probably driving. Most of the people who come to Yellowknife, for example, for medical attention are flying over here and it’s about a half-hour flight.
As to the order in which and the magnitude of the capital projects that are on the books for Fort Smith and Hay River, these two projects were, for lack of a better way of saying it, neck and neck for a long time in which one would go first and what kind of planning needed to be conducted, what kind of
groundwork needed to be laid for these projects going ahead. Hay River is the second largest community in the Northwest Territories. It does have a service area surrounding it. When we talk about Hay River’s population, we have to include the Hay River Reserve, Enterprise, Kakisa, Fort Providence, Fort Resolution to the other direction, to the east. It is a centre for some degree of commerce and services and makes a lot of sense, in my opinion, for medical services.
Whether or not Hay River has been able to recruit and retain and whether Fort Smith has been able to recruit and retain resident physicians is also a bit of a red herring. The fact is there is enough interest from locum physicians to fill these positions. Maybe it is not ideal and it’s certainly probably not the most cost effective for the department, but the services are there, the locums are there, the people can be treated, examined, hospitalized in their own community. We’re hoping that the ability to recruit and retain physicians will improve as medical institutions have increased the number of seats they have available and as we still are in this long pulling out of the reduced number of seats for physicians in Canada. That was a bad mistake and we’re still paying the price for it. We’re hoping that as time goes on, that the situation is going to be improved.
As I said, Hay River has a population of around 4,000 and a service area of closer to 8,000 to 10,000, and a facility like what is proposed, I think, will also go some ways towards facilitating, as the Minister said, the locums, the specialists, the itinerant teams that will come in and deliver services in the communities. You still have to have a facility to operate out of and, hopefully in the long run, doctors who will want to practice medicine there and have a hospital to do it in.
I don’t think the government wants to pay to have everybody from Hay River transported to Yellowknife everytime they require the services of a specialist or a procedure like a colonoscopy or a mammogram or a… You know, all of these services and specialists clinics that are all now currently operated out of the hospital that’s there. I don’t think the government wants to start to quantify the cost of bringing a population the size of Hay River and the needs of a community the size of Hay River to Yellowknife for service, or to Fort Smith, for that matter, if you want to talk about them being close by each other.
I can’t explain the rationale. I mean, that’s not my job to explain the rationale for two facilities, one in Fort Smith and one in Hay River, but I know that the one in Fort Smith did make significant progress on their planning and was able to get started on that.
I can tell you that we are looking forward to the Level C facility in Hay River as well. It has been on the books for a long time, practically as long as I
have been an MLA. We will make sure it gets used. I don’t know what my question is. Thank you.