Waterloo Region Record

Cat Lake leaders slam inaction

Mould may force evacuation unless help is received

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Angry and frustrated leaders of a remote northern Ontario reserve warned on Friday they will be forced to evacuate their community unless they receive immediate help dealing with mould-infested housing and their ailing children.

A month after Cat Lake First Nation declared an emergency over the squalid conditions that have left more than 100 children ill with severe skin conditions and lung infections, the community said both the federal and provincial government­s have done little to help.

“Nothing has been done. No action has been taken,” Abigail Wesley, the deputy chief, said at the Ontario legislatur­e. The situation, she said, was desperate.

Almost 100 homes in the fly-in Ojibwa community north of Sioux Lookout are in such bad shape due to mould, bare wiring and cracked foundation­s that they need to be demolished. The problem is that there are no other housing options.

The roughly 450 residents of the community said they have been asking for help since 2006 to no avail. Poor health has become endemic, they said, with an average of one person every three days having to be medevaced out for health care. Treatment in the community comprises essentiall­y of ointment and inhalers that can’t fix the underlying problem, residents said.

Joyce Cook, a band councillor, said the skin and lung ailments are taking a toll on the mental health of those afflicted. The community urgently needs both the federal and provincial government­s to step up — and right away, she said.

“We’re not even being recognized or heard,” Cook said. “It’s just an echo through the woods.”

For his part, Indigenous Services Minister Seamus O’Regan said on Friday that government officials and community representa­tives discussed an independen­t health assessment during a “technical meeting” on Feb. 7.

A pediatric respirolog­ist and support staff arrived in the community on Thursday to conduct the assessment and provide treatment as needed, he said. Another team with another specialist was due next week.

“We will address the results of the assessment as soon as they are available on an urgent basis,” O’Regan said in a statement. “We also reiterated and expanded upon our previous commitment­s to begin repairs immediatel­y and to identify, with the community, units requiring replacemen­t on an urgent basis.”

Provincial Indigenous Affairs Minister Greg Rickford said he’s had discussion­s with the band leadership and was looking at the possibilit­y of providing at least some immediate housing relief. He refused to discuss what specific measures the province was looking at.

At the same time, Rickford accused the federal government of inactivity.

“They’ve done a lot of promising to these communitie­s and delivered very little,” Rickford said of Ottawa. “We’ll continue to press them hard for it.”

Provincial New Democrat Sol Mamakwa, who called the evacuation threat real, said the community could not keep living with a status quo that included federal-provincial bickering over responsibi­lity for the situation while nothing changed.

Federal New Democrat Charlie Angus deplored the lack of action from both levels of government, saying people in Cat Lake have heard nothing but vague promises. Angus also called the threat of fire another unaddresse­d and critical issue, with children forced to sleep in basements beside unsafe wood stoves.

 ?? COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Cat Lake First Nation deputy chief Abigail Wesley pauses as she speaks to media during a news conference at Queen’s Park to bring attention to the health crisis affecting residents living in mouldy homes.
COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS Cat Lake First Nation deputy chief Abigail Wesley pauses as she speaks to media during a news conference at Queen’s Park to bring attention to the health crisis affecting residents living in mouldy homes.

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