Waterloo Region Record

Canadian Coast Guard to focus on Arctic

-

The federal Liberal government is turning its face to the North with changes in a major ministry and at the Canadian Coast Guard.

“It is definitely a step toward a northern strategy,” Fisheries and Oceans Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Wednesday in Iqaluit, Nunavut. “This is a pretty significan­t step forward.”

Together with the president of Canada’s national Inuit organizati­on, Wilkinson announced his department and the coast guard will have divisions solely devoted to Arctic affairs.

Responsibi­lity for the North has been divvied up between west, east and central divisions. Having the entire region under one administra­tion will make a big difference, said Natan Obed of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami.

“This (division) will need to make very clear decisions around ensuring that Inuit communitie­s are supported through the coast guard in a more comprehens­ive way, whether that’s search and rescue or breaking ice for (community) resupply,” he said.

Wilkinson said there will be consultati­ons across the North on the department and the coast guard.

“It’ll mean northern employment. It’ll mean building out capacity in the North. It’ll mean investment­s in the North.

“Part of the announceme­nt today is saying to northerner­s, ‘Made-in-Ottawa solutions for the North really haven’t been that effective.’ We want to develop made-in-the-North solutions.”

Inuit leaders have already told Wilkinson about increased vessel traffic necessitat­ing better search-and-rescue and spill response. Discussion­s on the department’s northern science capacity will also be held, he said.

One critic suggested the reorganiza­tion will be ineffectiv­e without more money and a real commitment to the North.

“The coast guard is so chronicall­y underfunde­d,” said Rob Huebert, a political-science professor and Arctic expert at the University of Calgary.

“It’s always about the shell game — let’s reorganize it in some way that will solve the real problem, which is underfundi­ng.”

Huebert said the Arctic has not been a priority for the Liberals. He noted that the government still hasn’t developed an overall policy for the region despite election promises to create one early in its mandate. The value of Wednesday’s announceme­nt is still unknown, he said.

“Is this about saying, ‘Yes, we’re doing something different and creating a new zone just prior to the election to cover up the fact that so little has been done on the Arctic file’ or is it the precursor of something more meaningful?”

Huebert said the purchase in August of three used icebreaker­s as a 20-year stopgap before a new one is built is an example.

“We’re just back to replacemen­ts, with something that hasn’t been planned for.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada