Cape Breton Post

Ring of Fire

Ontario to move ahead with road access into chromite-rich region

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Premier Kathleen Wynne says Ontario is moving ahead with building roads into the Ring of Fire region.

The provincial government has been talking with the chiefs of the Matawa First Nations for years, since it pledged $1 billion in 2014 to fund infrastruc­ture into the chromite-rich area.

The premier’s announceme­nt Monday in Thunder Bay, Ont., comes three months after she told nine First Nations in the region she wanted to see progress in weeks, not months, on discussion­s about the roads or she would move to bilateral talks with individual communitie­s.

Wynne announced that Ontario will work with three of those nine First Nations Webequie, Marten Falls and Nibinamik - to build yearround road access into a proposed mining developmen­t site being pursued by Noront Resources Ltd (TSXV:NOT).

An east-west road connecting the Webequie and Nibinamik communitie­s to the provincial highway network will be planned and built, providing all-season access to the communitie­s and the Ring of Fire, as well as a road connecting Marten Falls First Nation to the existing provincial highway network.

Wynne says the communitie­s are set to start environmen­tal assessment­s by January, and plan to begin constructi­on in 2019.

“The entire Ring of Fire region has huge potential for developmen­t that would benefit all of the communitie­s involved and the entire province - creating new jobs and improving the quality of life for people in the north,” Wynne said in a statement.

“Getting shovels in the ground to build this connection to the Ring of Fire will move us forward towards unlocking its full potential.”

The government said it is committed to moving forward with the regional framework agreement signed in 2014 with all nine Matawa First Nations to work together on regional long-term environmen­tal monitoring, resource revenue sharing, economic supports, and infrastruc­ture.

The chief of Marten Falls First Nation called the announceme­nt “a new beginning.”

“As the historical occupants of the Ring of Fire, we believe that mining developmen­t must be both environmen­tally and economical­ly sustainabl­e and we want to develop infrastruc­ture that enables a multi-generation­al chromite opportunit­y,” Chief Bruce Achneepine­skum said in a statement.

The Webequie First Nation welcomed the agreement, which the chief said will address the region’s infrastruc­ture needs.

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