Toronto Star

Attawapisk­at gripped by demand for housing

A quarter of existing units condemned; population expected to rise by 20%

- COLIN PERKEL

ATTAWAPISK­AT, ONT.— The intractabl­e housing crisis plaguing Attawapisk­at and many First Nations communitie­s across Canada is brought into sharp focus by Teresa Kataquapit.

Standing in her three-bedroom home, Kataquapit, 75, eyes the broken, loose and stained ceiling tiles; the heaving and cracked linoleum floors; the plastic-covered and boarded-up windows.

“It’s very cold,” a somewhat embarrasse­d Kataquapit said in Cree.

“You can feel the drafts all over the place, the windows, the doors, everywhere. There’s mould in this house.”

The home to five people has been condemned as unfit. It’s one of about 80 homes in this hardscrabb­le reserve in need of a bulldozer.

Yet like many other indigenous Canadians living on reserves, Kataquapit continues to reside in a structure heated by a single wood stove. There is nowhere else for her to go.

“I was promised a house twice by the former chiefs,” she said. “But nothing to date.”

Her grandson, Frankie Kataquapit, 26, who works at the DeBeers diamond mine 90 kilometres away, said he wishes “every day” that he could live in something better.

Attawapisk­at has about 340 homes for its 2,100 residents, an average of seven people in each. Some house as many as13 people. Coupled with substance abuse, the crowded conditions are fertile for abuse and despair — factors that play directly into the headline-grabbing suicide crisis afflicting the community.

With close to a quarter of existing units condemned, the pressure on the community is enormous and rising — the population is projected to grow by almost 20 per cent in the coming decade.

What you have, said Wayne Turner, the chief executive officer of the Attawapisk­at First Nation, is the very definition of a housing crisis.

“Each and every year, there’s new demand,” Turner said in his constructi­on-trailer office. “Our ability to provide housing is limited. We are limited by financial resources and capacity issues.”

Built on muskeg — soft, marshy wetland — in a region where temperatur­es can plunge into the mi- nus-50s, home constructi­on poses special challenges. About 75 per cent of the houses, poorly designed for the extreme climate, were built between 1960 into the 1990s — often on badly prepared sites and on inadequate foundation­s.

The spring thaw brings shifting structures, cracked walls, flooding, leaks and mould.

Louis Okimaw’s home might be accurately classified as a shack built almost 40 years ago.

Feeding the wood-stove — hardly up to the job when temperatur­es reach Arctic levels — takes a $200 cord of wood every two weeks or less. That’s a lot cheaper than the electric heating standard in the few new homes around — with their window stickers proudly proclaimin­g “Low-E Glass” — where costs reach about $1,100 a month.

Still, finding wood — with no way to haul it given his broken snowmobile — adds to the miseries, Okimaw said.

“They don’t get the right kind of materials,” he said. “If I could win the lottery, I would buy my own house.”

In a perfect world, solving the housing crisis on Attawapisk­at wouldn’t require a large lottery win. At about $260,000 to build a four-bedroom home, just constructi­ng 80 homes to replace the condemned ones would cost almost $21million — an amount that grows by the day.

It’s money no one seems to have in a community where unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment is rampant.

Neither the federal nor provincial government­s have committed to cutting a cheque close to that size any time soon, although Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett did say she was aware of the issue during her visit to Attawapisk­at on Monday.

In the interim, Kataquapit, her ailing husband in bed in a small room, said she doesn’t know if she’ll ever get to live in another home.

“I don’t blame anybody. I’m just waiting for a new house — like everybody else.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE PHOTOS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Teresa Kataquapit’s home is one of about 80 condemned as unfit. “I was promised a house twice by the former chiefs,” she said. “But nothing to date.”
NATHAN DENETTE PHOTOS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Teresa Kataquapit’s home is one of about 80 condemned as unfit. “I was promised a house twice by the former chiefs,” she said. “But nothing to date.”
 ??  ?? Louis Okimaw scans the damage in his son’s bedroom. “If I could win the lottery, I would buy my own house,” he said.
Louis Okimaw scans the damage in his son’s bedroom. “If I could win the lottery, I would buy my own house,” he said.

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