
N.W.T. gov't announces financial aid programs for wildfire evacuees, host communities
CBC
The Northwest Territories government launched two new programs on Thursday to help evacuees, and some host communities, with the financial burden of displacement.
One program is aimed at people who've lost income due to an evacuation, and the other is meant to help smaller communities that have taken in evacuees.
The funding programs arrive as a wildfire still rages next to Hay River, N.W.T. and the Kátł'odeeche First Nation reserve.
Following an 11-day evacuation order, Hay River residents began returning home Thursday. Residents of the severely damaged Kátł'odeeche First Nation reserve have yet to be allowed back.
As of Wednesday, nearly 2,000 evacuees had registered in Yellowknife. A number of others have been staying in other N.W.T. communities.
"This is the second year in a row that this has happened now. For those of us living on Vale Island, I believe it's the fourth year in a row we've had to evacuate," Hay River North MLA RJ Simpson said in the legislature Thursday, referring to evacuations triggered by previous years' floods.
Simpson said the financial support programs for evacuees are a first for the territory, "so that's very much appreciated."
"It's not going to make everyone whole, not everyone's going to be eligible, but it will help many of those in need," he said.
The Evacuee Income Disruption Support Program is meant to help those whose work was interrupted by an evacuation, with a one-time payment of $750.
To be eligible, a person must be age 17 or older and must have lost income because of an evacuation lasting more than seven days.
In the view of Kam Lake MLA Caitlin Cleveland however, one $750 cheque isn't going to cut it.
"When we look to the South and what's happening in Alberta, Alberta residents are receiving $1,250 per adult and $550 per dependent child when they go seven days with a mandatory evacuation," she told the Legislative Assembly.
"One of the concerns that I have is that there is such a high cost of living in the Northwest Territories," she said.
"Missing even one or two days of pay is extreme for people."