Yeah, thank you, Mr. Speaker. Thank you. If schools can no longer access Jordan's Principle funding, the resulting cuts to education will be so severe that our treaty rights will be violated. Will the Premier direct the Minister of ECE to restore that funding through exclusive education for our children, or will you stand by and let our sacred treaties be ignored and eroded? Thank you.
Debates of Oct. 28th, 2025
This is page numbers of the Hansard for the 20th Assembly, 1st 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 housing.
Topics
Question 859-20(1): Restoration of Jordan's Principle Funding
Oral Questions
Question 859-20(1): Restoration of Jordan's Principle Funding
Oral Questions
R.J. Simpson Hay River North
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, a bit of a loaded question there. I will say this. For the members of the public who want some insight into how things work around here, the Premier does not direct the Ministers to do things like that. That is a money decision, so those types of decisions are made by the financial management board. That is how that $14 million that was allocated came about. It was a decision of all of the group of Ministers here. So I don't -- from the technical standpoint, I don't have the power to tell the Minister to fund this. From a fiscal standpoint, the Minister does not have $16 million in her budget to fund it. So there's some issues with how things are being proposed there. That being said, the federal government has a long history of creating programs and then abandoning those programs and the GNWT picking up those programs because often they're much needed. This is an instance where we cannot pick up a $16 million a year increase in funding so we are going to continue to lobby the federal government, along with all the other Indigenous leaders at the Council of Leaders, to reinstate the program so that it works for the Northwest Territories. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Question 859-20(1): Restoration of Jordan's Principle Funding
Oral Questions
Question 860-20(1): Merging of Healthcare Card and Driver's Licence
Oral Questions
Robert Hawkins Yellowknife Centre
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate -- today I want to ask questions - surprise - to the health Minister, one of my favourite Ministers other there. Not the only favourite, but in the top 7 for sure. I was going to say top 8. In top 7, Mr. Speaker.
In my Member's statement, I talked about the way we could improve our health care security as well as potentially cost and credibility in the sense of making sure Northerners are using health care and those who certainly deserve it or qualify for it.
Mr. Speaker, I mentioned BC uses a photograph on their driver's license and also has a health care number on the back. Mr. Speaker, we may not be able to take all the leaps and bounds, but as I say, I'm here to help. So, Mr. Speaker, would the Minister be willing to investigate the options about being able to put a northern citizen's picture on the health care as a first step to ensure we can guarantee the credibility of our cards and our system at large. Thank you.
Question 860-20(1): Merging of Healthcare Card and Driver's Licence
Oral Questions
The Speaker Shane Thompson
Thank you, Member from Yellowknife Centre. Minister of Health and Social Services.
Question 860-20(1): Merging of Healthcare Card and Driver's Licence
Oral Questions
Lesa Semmler Inuvik Twin Lakes
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I can commit to connecting with my colleagues. I did have a little bit of a one-off conversation in Alberta as they're looking into this as well. But I can reach out to the other jurisdictions and see, like, how it's coming, the pros and cons of it, and how could that potentially be implemented here in the Northwest Territories. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Question 860-20(1): Merging of Healthcare Card and Driver's Licence
Oral Questions
Question 860-20(1): Merging of Healthcare Card and Driver's Licence
Oral Questions
The Speaker Shane Thompson
Colleagues, please remember this is oral questions. I don't need commentary afterwards. Oral questions. Member from Monfwi.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Jane Weyallon Armstrong Monfwi
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, in NWT, the majority of our community landfills are unlined. For Minister of MACA, can the Minister indicate which communities in the NWT currently have lined landfills. Thank you.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
The Speaker Shane Thompson
Thank you, Member from Monfwi. Minister of Municipal and Community Affairs.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Vince McKay Hay River South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. That I wouldn't know offhand. There's a lot of detail behind that question. However, what we can do is reach out and see how the community landfills are established. I know some of them are established on a clay base, not necessarily a liner. So I can reach out -- we can get the department to reach out to the -- they might even know but I don't have that detailed answer here. One of the things that I will say is that a lot of the landfills are -- actually all of the landfills are community-base operated, so they're operated by the community governments so they would be, you know, more, I guess, in tune of exactly how their landfill is operating. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Jane Weyallon Armstrong Monfwi
Thank you. Can the Minister explain if financial or technical support is available to communities, especially small and remote communities, to upgrade their landfill infrastructure to include liners? Thank you.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Vince McKay Hay River South
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. All the communities receive their community funding and that part of that community funding is to operate landfills, a portion of it. But the Government of the Northwest Territories have also done a plan for hazardous waste removal back -- over the past few years, and they've done a successful job in taking out some of this hazardous waste in some of these landfills. So whatever the communities are deciding to do, if they need to do them, it's usually done through their community funding or any other funding sources that the community's able to achieve. However, but they do have supports from municipal and community affairs in regards to operating the landfill, certification for landfills, and any other resources that they may require. So thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
The Speaker Shane Thompson
Thank you, Minister of Municipal and Community Affairs. Final supplementary. Member from Monfwi.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Jane Weyallon Armstrong Monfwi
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Well, it's a good time to partner with ECC regarding that, that question.
Okay, Mr. Speaker, permafrost thaw is affecting landfills. Mr. Speaker, MACA guidelines for modified solid waste facilities were developed in 2003. Is the department considering updating these guidelines? They are now over 20 years old. Thank you.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
Vince McKay Hay River South
Yeah, thank you, Mr. Speaker. I'm not entirely sure about the timeline on updating the policy or those guidelines. But what I could do is, again, reach out to the department and see what the plans are for them. However, we do follow the -- the communities do have to follow numerous guidelines when it comes to operating a landfill. Part of it is having a water license which goes through Wek'èezhìi Water Board in the Tlicho region, but in the other communities it's Northwest Territories Land and Water Board. Yeah, and the other thing to this is if there's any concerns about any spills or any hazardous waste spills from landfills, there is a toll-free number that can be called to report this, and it can be checked out. So thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Question 861-20(1): Community Landfills
Oral Questions
The Speaker Shane Thompson
Thank you, Minister of Municipal and Community Affairs. Oral questions. Member from Frame Lake.
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
October 28th, 2025
Julian Morse Frame Lake
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, my questions are for the Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment.
Mr. Speaker, what is the status of development of an economic vision and investment strategy by the department?
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Caitlin Cleveland Kam Lake
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. So, Mr. Speaker, work on the economic vision is underway within the Department of Industry, Tourism and Investment. It's important to mention to the Member that this document is not a strategy. It is intended to be an aspirational and values-based document but not a prescriptive plan. Really, it's a guiding framework for the territory, ensures we're aligned, and ultimately ends up being our combined elevator pitch, if you will. Thank you.
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Julian Morse Frame Lake
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, I would just note that in the government's response to the 2025 environmental audit, it very specifically says in there, in writing, that it is a strategy. I'm curious about this. And I guess I would just ask the question, what is the point of developing a vision if you don't have a strategy to implement it? Thank you.
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Caitlin Cleveland Kam Lake
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. So, Mr. Speaker, in conversations with multiple entities, it was raised to the Government of the Northwest Territories, including myself, that really what we needed was a combined way that we talk about the Northwest Territories and that we talk about our aspirational goals and where we're headed as far as economic development and as far as developing ourselves and investing in ourselves as a territory. And what we needed was a common elevator pitch that we could take beyond the borders of the Northwest Territories. And what, ultimately, this document would do would be to align the strategies that we're putting together, whether those strategies come out of housing, whether they come out of health and social services, whether they come out of the Department of Finance, so that they all fall under a common vision for the Northwest Territories and a common goal. Thank you.
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Julian Morse Frame Lake
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, what is being done by staff who are developing -- I'm going to keep referring to it as a strategy -- the new strategy response to the concerns raised by the 2025 environmental audit about effectiveness of previous strategies? I won't go into the audit here.
Question 862-20(1): Economic Vision for the Northwest Territories
Oral Questions
Caitlin Cleveland Kam Lake
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. So, Mr. Speaker, the audit specifically called out gaps in strategies, like the mineral development strategy and economic opportunity strategy, and the vision would respond by aligning what we've heard, including through ongoing collaboration to implement the Mineral Resources Act and modernize our regulatory framework. So, in short, Mr. Speaker, the vision would unify this work, unify what we've learned, into a single focus statement to guide future economic efforts across the territory. And I'll end that there. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.