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PM approved 860 infrastructure projects

PM approved 860 infrastructure projects, only one has broken ground



Huffington Post CanadaHuffington Post Canada


Jesse Ferreras9 hrs ago





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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been hard at work since his government took office over a year ago.


But how much he's accomplishing has been a matter of some debate in recent months.


The latest questions surround the infrastructure projects that were approved after the first budget implementation act was passed on June 13, according to Bloomberg News.


Since then, 860 projects have been approved across Canada. But only one, a disaster mitigation project in Whitecourt, Alta., has actually broken ground in that time frame.


The project seeks to "control erosion along the south bank of the Athabasca River" in Whitecourt, a town about 177 kilometres north of Edmonton. The federal government contributed $1,839,888 to realize it.


Information regarding the progress of projects comes from a dataset provided by Infrastructure Canada.


And indeed, it shows that the Whitecourt project is the only one that's even started construction, after breaking ground on July 13.


Bloomberg said the dataset likely underestimates how much progress has actually been made on these projects.


An Infrastructure Canada spokesperson said numerous projects have started their work and that 65 per cent of the ones announced as part of the funding's first phase are in progress.


But the lack of advancement on them shows that it's tougher to stimulate the economy through infrastructure spending than many likely anticipated.


TD noted this in September, when it issued a report showing that stimulus spending won't add as much to Canada's economy as the federal government said it would.


The Liberals said their spending would add 0.5 per cent to Canada's GDP this year and one per cent from 2017 to 2018.


TD, however, said it was more likely to add 0.3 per cent and 0.2 per cent to the economy in each of the next two years, for a total of 0.5 per cent.


The revelations come amid questions about how much Trudeau's Liberals are actually pulling off, despite the hopeful campaign that put them in government.


Two months ago, it emerged that the Trudeau government's first nine months in office were the least productive of any in over two decades.


It is, however, keeping most of its promises.


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almost 8 years ago
world's largest chromite deposit (MPP Toby Barrett)

2016-01-22 at 17:21


LETTER: World’s largest chromite deposit sits stalledOPINION


By MPP Toby Barrett

As a rural southern MPP travelling the North - last week’s pre-budget hearings were my fourth tour over the past year - I am always struck by the commonality we share with our resource-based economies, whether it be farming or forestry, mining or steel.


However, all too often, we see opportunity lost or, at minimum, underappreciated. A case-in-point would be Ontario’s as yet-to-be-developed Ring of Fire.


The Ring of Fire, located in a remote area 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay, is considered one of Ontario’s most promising mineral developments in a century, with the discovery of North America’s first commercial quantities of chromite. Early exploration in 2001 also identified significant deposits of nickel, copper, zinc and platinum.


The chromite – one of the richest deposits in the world – has an estimated value of $60 billion.


The Ring of Fire mineral discovery has the potential to be a tremendous boost to Ontario’s rich and long mining economy that goes back to the 1800s.


In 2013, Cliffs Resources pulled out and sold their $700 million investment and mining rights to Noront, a Canadian junior miner. Noront is currently pursuing development of nickel with future plans to develop the chromite holdings.


People striving to develop resources tell us they’re under siege in the North – the Endangered Species Act, the Far North Act, and a plethora of rules and regulations, never ending consultation and a dragging of feet by government.


Land use planning environmental assessments have all been delayed and still remain outstanding. According to the government, the delays are due to the time it has taken to consult with Aboriginal communities.


As Opposition Leader Patrick Brown charged during Question Period last November, “The time for talk is over. It’s time for action in the north. Northerners and investors are tired of this government’s wait-and-see attitude toward the development of the Ring of Fire. As noted in yesterday’s National Post, this government’s lack of action on its billion-dollar infrastructure promise to the Ring of Fire leaves investors worried and frustrated. Platitudes and photo ops don’t get shovels in the ground; they don’t get people working. Only a firm timeline for construction of a transportation corridor in the Ring of Fire will give investors the confidence they need.”


A 2014 Fraser Institute report noted that one reason investors lose interest in Ontario’s mining potential is the lack of clarity and understanding around the Aboriginal consultation process. In comparison to the rest of Canada, Ontario takes less of a leadership role and has delegated more consultation to the private sector.


In December, Ontario’s Auditor General also charged that “No detailed plan or timeline for supporting development of the Ring of Fire has been developed” - this in spite of government incurring operating costs of $13 million, and the transfer of $16 million to the nine Matawa First Nations impacted by the development. Negotiations between government and the Matawa communities have cost $7 million to date.


In addition to recommending that transfer payments to Aboriginal communities should be documented to show how the money is spent, Auditor General Lysyk recommended the province take more of a leadership role in consultation.


As our resource-based economy continues to flounder, it’s unconscionable the world’s largest chromite deposit sits stalled.


There has got to be a better way!


MPP Toby Barrett
PC, Haldimand-Norfolk




Tags in this story: OPINION LETTER

over 8 years ago
Re: Wynne in China 2015/sept.2012 news..Sinocan


See the new look we're trying in beta »




Ring of Fire sparks Chinese interest in mining



Chinese company Sinocan expected to start drilling near Webequie next month


CBC News Posted: Sep 17, 2012 10:48 AM ET Last Updated: Sep 17, 2012 11:05 AM ET






A recent delegation of Chinese diplomats visited Webequie First Nation, as Chinese company Sinocan is expected to start drilling in the chromite-rich region known as the Ring of Fire next month.

A recent delegation of Chinese diplomats visited Webequie First Nation, as Chinese company Sinocan is expected to start drilling in the chromite-rich region known as the Ring of Fire next month. (CBC)







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Chinese diplomats are intent on building trust with northern Ontario First Nations to further their mining interests, according to a Chinese-Canadian business man.


Peng You, a Thunder Bay resident with ties to China, helped facilitate a recent visit by China's Consulate-General to Webequie First Nation. He said the arrival of one of China's top diplomats in Canada is significant.


"I think that part is very important. It's not just for one company. In future, more companies [will] invest in northwest Ontario, especially in [the] mining industry."


Webequie is one of the First Nations closest to a promising chromite deposit in the James Bay lowlands.


For months, US-company Cliffs Natural Resources has been the focus of discussions about development in the Ring of Fire.


But the Chinese company Sinocan is expected to start drilling near Webequie next month.


Peng You said soon chiefs and elders from northwestern Ontario could be on their way to China to talk about the Ring of Fire as part of a diplomatic exchange.


"They have to have some knowledge about China … because to deal with Chinese business people [it’s important to learn] a bit of culture about them," Peng You said.


Ontario's Ring of Fire secretariat oversees development in the mineral development area.


A spokesperson said the secretariat had "no knowledge" of the Chinese visit.





almost 9 years ago
Re: it's starting...

''Imagine a CEO of a struggling corp. playing hard to get on a new profit center that could boost the bottom line, like Harper appears to be doing with the ROF....don't think they'd last very long.


Enough partisan crap ..time for them all to get on the same page, or get out of the way.


Harper...our national leader....sure, as long as your wave the same colours.


Absolute disgrace, and total failure of fiduicary duty as our national leader...imo''......


----------------


Are you sugesting Harper our national leader release a blank cheque to Wynne???


Wow god help us.

about 9 years ago
Al Jazeera ????????????????????
































Environment


Rings of Fire



Opiate addiction and mining developments are threatening the future of Canada's First Nations rural communities.


29 Jul 2015 15:28 GMT | Environment, Human Rights, Health, Drugs, Canada








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In the far north of Canada's Ontario province, where opiate addiction afflicts the First Nation population, nurse practitioner Mae Katt runs a mobile drug treatment programme.


Her urgent mission is to set up effective programmes to treat this devastated population in the hopes that they will be able to shape their future, on their territory, and become the employment workforce backbone of the coming "Ring of Fire" mining operations.


It is a mammoth challenge, especially as up to 80 percent of the adult population of some communities negotiating the mining developments are addicted to opiates.


This pristine territory is set to emerge as one of the richest mining sites in North America. First Nation leaders and Mae have seen their people betrayed before with broken promises; this time, they must secure their voice in the coming economic boom and take part in the opportunity to defend their land and lift themselves out of endemic poverty and isolation.


The mining developments might present a Faustian bargain, but Mae is determined that her efforts and that of her team can pave a way for her people to reclaim their health and their future on their land.



Nurse practitioner Mae Katt runs a mobile drug treatment programme in Canada's Ontario province where the First Nation population is heavily afflicted by opiate addiction [Al Jazeera]







FILMMAKER'S VIEW


By Candida Paltiel


I first became aware of the Ring of Fire as I was finishing a stint as the artistic director of an environmental film festival where I programmed many works from communities whose lands and lives were being disrupted by global economic forces. The discovery in my own country of the Ring of Fire, the massive mineral find in the pristine wetlands of the James Bay Lowlands, revealed the Canadian chapter in this story, one in which formerly invisible aboriginal communities were facing global juggernauts while trying to determine their own future on their territories.


Originally, I was going to follow the negotiation process over this development, which at the outset of the staking frenzy was being compared to that of Canada's Alberta tar sands. I wondered whether a new bar would be established for resource extraction in my country, in which all parties, in particular the First Nations, would benefit.


But my introduction to Mae Katt, a pioneering First Nation nurse practitioner, who has worked in the region for almost four decades, changed my focus.


In the summer of 2012 Mae invited me to observe her work delivering a mobile drug treatment programme in the remote, tiny fly-in reserve community of Marten Falls, at the centre of the mining disputes. There I learned about the scope of a silent epidemic afflicting the communities that were now in the global mining spotlight. It became clear that the story I needed to focus on was that negotiations with the extractive industry were taking place against the backdrop of an opiate addiction and suicide crisis of immense consequence.



Marten Falls lies at the centre of the mining disputes [Al Jazeera]



What lies behind the addictions and traumas in these communities, is what sets apart this opiate crisis from other places in North America, which are also dealing with the impact of prescription drug abuse.


Historic injustice explains much of the predicament many First Nations communities are in, but there are also continuous indignities that the people in these areas experience daily as a consequence of living in poverty and neglect. Though surrounded by fresh water, they do not have safe, potable drinking water; multi-year funding for addiction treatment programmes is not assured; educational funding for aboriginal children is not equivalent to their non-aboriginal counterparts. This list continues and simply defies logic in a country with Canada's wealth.


All too often the Canadian public has remained in the dark - willingly or otherwise - about so much that affects First Nations communities in Canada, and in this case, the particular issues, concerns, and pressures on the Matawa communities.


It seems to be changing but I am not sure how pervasive it is. One of the chiefs told me that Idle No More, the movement which took off in late 2012, raising international awareness about the rights and concerns of Canada's aboriginal people, barely affected his remote community. He saw it as an urban movement, gaining traction as urban aboriginal populations experience a renaissance and play a greater role in cities across Canada.


My hope is that this film sheds light and understanding on the complex road toward self-determination, change and recovery in the isolated reserve communities whose survival is still very much at stake. The population that Mae is treating faces hardship, but is inspiring, self-aware, making commitments and looking to the future. Their leaders have been struggling to be heard for decades about what has been happening on the ground.


It is time we listen.


Ironically, a window into the lives of the Matawa people opened with the discovery of the Ring of Fire. Suddenly, what First Nations in the far north of Canada's most populous province have endured for years has become visible and they will no longer be pushed to the background - idle no more.


What is clear to me is that the change cannot be one-sided, nor simply based on whether or not the mining operations will open or not. The broader social, political and economic forces at play must also be open to changing the way in which we conduct our affairs with our First People in my country. We cannot afford to do otherwise. To me this is the only path to reconciliation.


The story behind Canada's Rings of Fire is still unfolding in real time. This is but a fragment.


Source: Al Jazeera








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about 9 years ago
all4me
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