Cash boost for highway in Arctic Canada

A new highway will connect the Arctic town of Inuvik (pictured here) and the community of Tuktoyaktuk, further north on the coast of the Arctic Ocean. (Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International)$65 million approved for Arctic highway construction

Politicians in Canada’s Northwest Territories (N.W.T.) approved $65 million in spending on Monday that will allow construction of a highway between the communities of Inuvik and Tuktoyaktuk  to begin this fall.

The government of the Northwest Territories has already spent more than $12 million to get the project off the ground. Currently the only way to travel between the two communities is by air or ice road.

Debate over the project stretched on for hours on Monday night. Some politicians are concerned the project will provide few long-term jobs while others are worried about rising construction costs.

Jane Groenewegen, a politician representing the N.W.T. electoral district of Hay River South, said the federal government wants the road and the territory made a commitment when Canada raised its borrowing limit.

“I believe we certainly made a moral if not legal commitment to the federal government at that time that pending that increase in the borrowing limit we would join together with them, so I think that to renege on that now would certainly have implications with respect to our relationship with the federal government,” she said.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced on Monday in N.W.T.’s capital city of Yellowknife that Canada will provide an additional $50 million for the road, for a total federal contribution of $200 million.

That represents about two-thirds of the cost of the $299 million project.

The territorial government had been hoping Ottawa would fund 75 per cent of the cost of the highway.

Wendy Bisaro, a politician representing N.W.T.’s Frame Lake electoral district, said Ottawa should be paying at least three quarters of the cost.

“I was relatively OK with a 75/25 split but now we’re down to 67 per cent, and that just means it’s a greater burden on us as a government, and that concerns me a great deal,” she said.

Bisaro said she’s concerned about how much money the territorial government is putting into the project and that the federal government is backing away from its responsibility to pay for provincial and territorial highways in full.

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