Stephen Harper to kick off highway construction in Inuvik - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:53 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Stephen Harper to kick off highway construction in Inuvik

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will be in Inuvik, N.W.T., to formally mark the start of construction on a 140-kilometre highway between the town and Tuktoyaktuk.

Prime minister heading north to mark start of construction on important all-season route

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will be in Inuvik, N.W.T., on Wednesday to formally mark the start of construction ona 140-kilometre highway between the town and Tuktoyaktuk.

The long-promised highway is expected to take four years to build, with construction happeningonlyduring the winter months when the ground is firm. Initial construction started early last year.

The federal government has promised $200 million for the highway, with the territory voting last spring to spend $65 million on it, in addition to $12 million already invested in getting the project started.

For years, people in the Northwest Territories' Mackenzie Delta region lobbied for the140-kilometre all-weather road tolink the two communities, which are currently connectedby air or ice road only.

About 1,000 jobs will be created over the four-year construction period.

For the Conservative government, it will stretchCanada's road network further north and hearkens back to former prime minister John Diefenbaker's vision of connecting the north to the rest of Canada.

N.W.T. Premier Bob McLeod and federal Environment Minister LeonaAglukkaq will be at the ceremonial groundbreaking along with Harper.

The project has faced criticism, with some arguing the benefits are questionable.

MLA NormanYakelayaargued in October that the territory'sSahtu region, where almost all of its oil and gas activity is occurring, currently has no highway connecting it to northern parts of the territory.

"The government is right now focusing on the Inuvik-Tuk highway because the federal government dropped $200 million into our coffers," he said. "The federal government is dictating where the priority is, even though right now the hot spot is in the Sahtu with the oil and gas exploration."

A senior government source played up the economic benefits in an email to CBC News. "The Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk highwaywill completeCanadas road network from coast to coast to coast, and will create jobs, economic growth and long-term prosperity in the North."