Edmonton Journal

INDIGENOUS SERVICES MINISTER MARC MILLER SAYS THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT NEEDS TO DO MORE TO SUPPORT PEOPLE LIVING IN NUNAVUT, PARTICULAR­LY WHEN IT COMES TO THE TERRITORY'S HOUSING CRISIS.

- EMMA TRANTER

•Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the federal government needs to do more to support people living in Nunavut, particular­ly when it comes to the territory's long-standing housing crisis.

The Liberal politician made his first-ever visit to Nunavut this week, spending two days in Iqaluit.

In an interview with The Canadian Press, Miller said overcrowde­d housing in Nunavut was “a vehicle for spread” of COVID-19. Last fall, a COVID-19 outbreak in Arviat, Nunavut, infected 339 of the community's 3,000 people and killed one person.

“For Nunavummiu­t, that's not a surprise,” Miller said Friday.

With more than half of Nunavut's residents living in overcrowde­d homes, as highlighte­d in MP Mumilaaq Qaqqaq's territoria­l housing report, Miller said people are left more vulnerable.

“Most people don't look at housing through a health lens,” said Miller. “They see it as somewhere to live ... but they don't see it through the health lens that many people in Nunavut have been saying for ages and have been ignored.”

He said remoteness shouldn't mean communitie­s such as those in Nunavut are left behind the rest of the country.

“We have to make sure that Inuit get first-class treatment in a country that everyone looks at as a firstclass health-care system.”

Miller said the pandemic showed systemic racism affects remote communitie­s like those in Nunavut when it comes to accessing health care. With no intensive care unit in the territory and only one hospital for its 25 communitie­s, COVID-19 patients who needed treatment were flown hundreds of kilometres to southern Canada.

“One case of COVID in the North costs a lot more than one case of COVID in the south,” he said.

Miller also addressed Qaqqaq's scathing farewell speech in June when the New Democrat announced she wouldn't seek re-election. In it, Qaqqaq said she was racially profiled by security on Parliament Hill and didn't feel safe at work.

“I am horrified ... but that is her reality and that is what she lived,” Miller said. “The House itself is a parochial, paternalis­tic beast.”

Later Friday, Miller and Ahmed Huseen, minister for Families, Children and Social Developmen­t, touted the Liberals' budget commitment­s to build Indigenous-led shelters for people experienci­ng gender-based violence.

Applicatio­ns for shelters and transition­al housing will open in September, with funding earmarked for 38 emergency shelters and 50 transition­al homes across Canada.

Liberal cabinet ministers made another announceme­nt Friday in the North, with Hussen and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland touting their budget commitment­s to child care and early learning in Whitehorse.

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