Medicine Hat News

Northern miners concerned federal COVID wage subsidy leaves them in the cold

-

YELLOWKNIF­E

Northern miners have told the federal government that the wage subsidy program brought in to get the country through the COVID-19 pandemic leaves them out in the cold.

“We urgently request the federal government take the unique circumstan­ces of Canada’s North into account and ensure the companies active in its most important and largest private sector industry are provided the supports they need to survive,” says a letter from territoria­l mining associatio­ns to federal Northern Affairs Minister Dan Vandal.

The letter, co-signed by the Yukon Chamber of Mines, is being supported by all three territoria­l government­s.

Tom Hoefer of the Northwest Territorie­s and Nunavut Chamber of Mines said Monday the program is a poor fit for the northern mining industry.

“I don’t think they’re getting the help that we expected them to.”

Hoefer points out mining companies are squeezed between falling prices for commoditie­s and increased COVID-19related expenses.

More than 1,200 northerner­s have been sent home to their remote communitie­s, many still on the payroll. Meanwhile, companies are using chartered planes to pick up their remaining workers from the south, as well as incurring the extra cost of enhancing public health measures at the mine sites.

But it’s the requiremen­t to show a 30 per cent loss in revenue from this time last year that’s the biggest problem for the industry.

Mining revenue streams are uneven, the letter to Vandal says. As well, some mines were just ramping up production and last year’s income isn’t a good comparison.

The requiremen­t is even harder on exploratio­n companies, which don’t have a revenue stream other than investment dollars.

“Their ability to raise funds on the market is basically zero now, but they still have to maintain costs,” Hoefer said.

“How do they keep their people? The worry is, their people are the ones that have built up the expertise on the projects they’re working on.”

Local Indigenous companies that service mines also have large seasonal income swings that don’t fit into the federal relief framework.

“A lot of the Indigenous companies are startups,” said Hoefer. “They haven’t been in business for 10 years and can’t say, ‘This is a steady-state cash flow and it’s easy to compare.”’

N.W.T. Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment Katrina Nokleby said her government backs the need for more support for northern mining.

“Mining and exploratio­n is the biggest source of private sector jobs and income for our residents and has been the heart of our economy for decades,” she said in a statement. “It is imperative that we continue to support it.”

In its letter to Vandal, the industry emphasizes its importance to the Arctic economy.

Between the three territorie­s, mining directly employs about 1,000 people and is the largest single private-sector employer and contributo­r to GDP, producing more than $3 billion in minerals a year.

It says it spends about $3 billion a year in the North, “including a significan­t and growing share with

Indigenous residents and businesses.” Many Indigenous government­s also receive payments from mining companies, it says.

Vandal’s office did not respond to a request for comment Monday.

Hoefer said industry representa­tives are to meet with Vandal on Wednesday to try to work something out.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Minister of Northern Affairs Dan Vandal speaks to media prior to the start of the Liberal Cabinet Retreat at the Fairmont Hotel in Winnipeg on Jan. 19.
CP FILE PHOTO Minister of Northern Affairs Dan Vandal speaks to media prior to the start of the Liberal Cabinet Retreat at the Fairmont Hotel in Winnipeg on Jan. 19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada