Montreal Gazette

Concerns over Ring of Fire services

Native needs could strain Ottawa: report

- STEVE RENNIE THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The federal government may struggle to keep up with a growing need for mental health and other social services in First Nations communitie­s located within a massive mineral find in northern Ontario, according to a newly released document.

Senior officials at Health Canada were cautioned last May that their existing social programs to help aboriginal communitie­s in the Ring of Fire may not be sufficient to meet increased demand.

“Though supports are available, it is not clear whether current programmin­g will be sufficient to meet emerging needs,” says a memo to the deputy and associate deputy ministers.

The Neskantaga First Nation declared a state of emergency last April over a spate of suicides — and the officials were warned Ottawa could face heightened pressure to provide similar support services to other communitie­s as the area undergoes further developmen­t.

“Other communitie­s located adjacent to the Ring of Fire developmen­t may have similar complex needs, and the increased activity in this region may place additional pressure upon the federal government for further action,” the document says.

The Canadian Press obtained the memo under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Several federal department­s are working with local First Nations and the Ontario government on community health, social services and skills training. Health Canada has funded projects in nine First Nations communitie­s to try to curb prescripti­on drug abuse. There’s also work underway to address mental health issues and prevent suicides.

Addressing these social problems is necessary if First Nations are going to be involved in the Ring of Fire project, the document says.

“Physical and mental health are determinan­ts for job and economic readiness,” it says.

“Recognizin­g the impact that socio-economic challenges have on economic developmen­t, the government of Canada has prioritize­d the building of social infrastruc­ture in these communitie­s as a critical precursor to supporting their participat­ion in the opportunit­ies afforded by the Ring of Fire developmen­ts.”

The Ring of Fire, located more than 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay, Ont., is a treasure trove of minerals.

Both the federal and provincial government­s have high hopes for billions of dollars of investment in the Ring of Fire — developmen­t they hope will bring prosperity to struggling First Nations and royalties to their own coffers.

No one from Health Canada was immediatel­y available to discuss the memo.

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