At breaking point, hamlet of Pangnirtung issues cry for help
Everyone thought things in the Nunavut community of Pangnirtung were finally looking up.
The hamlet, which once had one of the highest suicide rates in the territory, hadn’t seen a single such tragedy in more than a year. A community group had drawn up a forward-looking, proactive plan to keep youth safe. People breathed easier.
Then February came.
“We had 12 suicide attempts by youth over a period of about two weeks,” said hamlet Coun. Markus Wilcke. “We’ve had a bit of a wake-up call.”
The hamlet of about 1,400 surrounded by mountains, glaciers and ocean took a look at itself and saw that Pangnirtung was soaked in violence, at a breaking point.
Police calls rose 50 per cent since 2016. Assaults nearly tripled. A string of arsons starting last fall destroyed half a dozen buildings, including badly needed housing and the school bus.
Last September, a 16-year-old wandered through the town in the early morning, firing a gun 11 times into the air near the school, health centre and post office.
In March, the territory’s poison control centre took 55 calls from Pangnirtung — three times as many as from any spot in Nunavut. Booze flows in what is supposed to be a dry community. Domestic violence follows.
“We’ve reached the limits of the resilience and resources of the community,” Wilcke said. “There was a reaction of, ‘We’ve got to do something.’ We felt that we were in quite a desperate situation. We don’t want to go back to where we were.”
Last week, the hamlet council issued a life-and-death plea to the territorial government.
“Violent events in Pang have now become a daily occurrence,” the letter says. “Bootlegging is rampant and uncontrolled.
“If adequate urgency response services are not provided immediately, more and more people in Pangnirtung will be physically injured, emotionally traumatized and more lives will be lost.”
No one knows what touched off the events in February. Pangnirtung is not without resources: a community hall and arena for organized sports, active clubs for youth, engaged elders. An adjacent national park and a fishprocessing plant provide jobs.
A volunteer group had just been formed to address the hamlet’s quality of life and wellness.
“It’s really disheartening that in the middle of this, all of this started happening,” said Margaret Nakashuk, a local member of the legislature.
She suspects current problems stem from so many years without social supports.
Pangnirtung — like most Nunavut communities — has no addiction treatment programs, emergency shelters or crisis support services. Its front-line workers are few and overworked.
Pang’s letter to the territorial government asks for an emergency shelter, money for crisis counselling and victim support, quicker referrals to mentalhealth treatment and more frontline workers. It also wants airplanes leaving for the community screened for alcohol and drugs.
The territorial government has said it will send representatives to the next council meeting on May 21.