Gîtes D'uranium Et Projets D'exploration Uranifère Au Québec

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Gîtes D'uranium Et Projets D'exploration Uranifère Au Québec Gîtes d'uranium et projets d'exploration uranifère au Québec 80° 75° 70° 65° 60° 55° Ivujivik Projets * N U N A V Salluit D U Projet d’exploration à l'étape de la préfaisabilité é T [] d t 'H ro u it 1. Matoush (Ressources Strateco inc.) ds on [] Projets d’exploration avancée 2. Apple (Ressources Strateco inc.) Kangiqsujuaq 3. Camie River (Cameco Corporation) 4. Dieter Lake (Fission Energy Corp.) 5. Eclat (Ressources Strateco inc.) Akulivik Quaqtaq 6. Epsilon (Ressources ABE inc.) 7. Gîte L (Areva et SOQUEM) 8. Mistassini (Ressources Strateco inc.) 60° 9. North Shore (Uracan Resources Ltd.) 60° 10. Otish (Projet Péribonka) Puvirnituq (Virginia Energy Resources Inc. (Otish Minerals)) 11. Otish South (Cameco Corporation) Kangirsuk 12. Otish Uranium (Ditem Explorations inc.) 13. Pacific Bay (Ressources Strateco inc.) Baie Projets d’exploration d'Ungava [] 14. 31K02/ED Exploration (Particuliers) Aupaluk XWXW 15. Baie Johan-Beetz (Ressources Gimus inc.) XWXW 16. Daniel Lake (Exploration Azimut inc.) Torngat XW 17. Du Portage (Waseco Resources Inc.) Inukjuak 18. Girard (Montero Mining and Exploration Ltd.) Tasiujaq Kangiqsualujjuaq XW 19. Hotish (Exploration Dios inc.) XWXWXW XWXWXWXWXWXWXWXW16 20. Hunter's Point (Entreprises minières Globex inc.) XWXWXWXWXW 21. Kipawa (Forum Uranium Corp./ Hecla Mining) []XW[]XWXW 22. Lac Holt (Pourvoirie du Lac Holt inc.) Kuujjuaq 26 ) 23. Matoush Ext (Ressources Strateco inc.) XW 24. Mistassini - Otish (Uranium Valley Mines Ltd.) XWXW ) XW T r Baie d XWXWXW a 25. Petitpas/12L06 (Particuliers) 'Hud XWXWXW c rador son é du Lab 26. Rae NorthM (Explorationer Azimut inc.) XW d XW e 27. Tremblay/22D04 (Particuliers) 1 9 2 28. Watson/31O06 (Particuliers) XWXW 7 XW XW d ) XWXW XW u C * Projets faisant l'objet de titres miniers actifs o XW n en mars 2014 Umiujaq XW s XW e i l XW XW XW p r XW XW i XW v é XW Gîtes d'uranium ** XWXW XW XW17 ( XW XW n XW ) )XW XWXW )) ) o n [] ) d ) ) ) Gisement à tonnage évalué ) é XW 4 f i n Gîte dont les travaux d’exploration ont permis de i ) t i ) XW f XW ) []) XWXWXW ) déterminer le volume et les réserves de la minéralisation 55° Kuujjuarapik Gîte travaillé 55° Whapmagoostui ) Indice dont les travaux d’exploration ont permis de Gayot déterminer la forme, la continuité et l’orientation XW de la minéralisation Kawawachikamach XW Indice (à partir de 425 ppm) XW Matimekosh Schefferville Un indice fait référence à un ou plusieurs corps minéralisés dont au moins une des substances métalliques a une teneur égale ou supérieure )XW Baie James XWXW ) au seuil prescrit Chisasibi Radisson Sakami XW XW ) ** Tiré de la base de données publique SIGÉOM XWXW XW ) (2014-05-08) ) ) ) XW XWXW XW 2 XW Principaux secteurs uranifères Wemindji XWXW [] )) XW XW XWXWXWXW XW XWXWXW XW Baie XWXW Fermont Eastmain Otish James XWXWXWXW XW 10 définitif) privé (non XW du Conseil XWXW ) ) ) racé de 1927 5-13-23 XWXW1 XWXW[]XW )XW ) XW T Waskaganish Nemaska XW [] ) Lourdes-de-Blanc-Sablon )XW XWXWXW [] ) XW Nemiscau XW[][]XW ) XW[][][][] ) ) 6-7XW 8-19 []XW [] XW []XW ) 24 3-11-12 Côte-Nord XW XW ) 22 50° Mistissini ) 9 [] ) 25 XW15 50° Mingan XWXW )XW )XWXW ) ) ) XW )XW ) XW []XWXWXW ) )[] ) ) ) Uashat ) Ekuanitshit [] Natashquan Matagami Oujé-Bougoumou XW ) ) ) Sept-Îles Havre-Saint-Pierre Aguanish Waswanipi Chibougamau XW XW Baie-Johan-Beetz Chapais XW XWXW XW XW Lebel-sur-Quévillon XW Baie-Comeau ) XW Sainte-Anne-des-Monts XW Gaspé Rouyn-Noranda ) ) nt XW re XW au Matane -L ) nt XW Val-d'Or ai rent Saguenay e S Saint-Lau - 27 XW uv Golfe du VE XW e EU Fl Rimouski -N OR [] RE D Hautes- R RA [] TE B 18 -LA XW Pointe-à-la-Croix ET ) ) Ville-Marie Laurentides XW Rivière-du-Loup ) ) Cap-aux-Meules 28 XWXW La Tuque XW )XW []XWXW Kipawa 20-21 XW []XW XW XWXW ) ) XW XWXWXW ) Témiscaming XWXW ) ) ) XW ) ) XW ) Québec XW XW ) ) ) ) Ferme-Neuve XW ) XWXW ) NOUVEAU- Kipawa Maniwaki ) Mont-Laurier ) ) BRUNSWICK ÎLE-DU- ) Kitigan Zibi Trois-Rivières PRINCE-ÉDOUARD Fort-Coulonge []XW ) ) ) ) ) 14 ÉTATS-UNIS ) ) )XW ONTARIO ) ) Chelsea Drummondville ) ) Montréal 45° Gatineau Sherbrooke 45° NOUVELLE- ntique ÉCOSSE céan Atla ) O 75° 70° 65° 60° Réalisation 0 150 km Ministère de l’Énergie et des Ressources naturelles Direction de l'information géologique du Québec Note : Le présent document n'a aucune portée légale. © Gouvernement du Québec, mai 2014.
Recommended publications
  • Environmental Study of the George River Watershed (Nunavik, Québec) Impacts of Climate and Societal Changes
    Environmental study of the George River watershed (Nunavik, Québec) Impacts of climate and societal changes Dedieu J.P. 1*, Franssen J. 2, Monfette M. 2, Herrmann T.M. 2, MacMillan G.A. 3, Grant E. 3, Amyot M. 3, Lévesque E. 4, Housset J. 4, Gérin-Lajoie J. 4, Dubois G. 4, Bayle A. 5, Snowball H. 6 (Photo M. Monfette, 2017) 1 IGE-CNRS / Université Grenoble-Alpes, France 4 Dept Environmental Science – Université du Québec à Trois Rivières, Québec, Canada 2 Dept Geography – Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada 5 LECA-CNRS / Université Grenoble Alpes, France 3 Dept Biological Sciences – Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada 6 The Northern village of Kangiqsualujjuaq, Québec, Canada International Symposium of LabEx DRIIHM Inter-Disciplinary Research Facility on Human-Environment Interactions - ANR-11-LABX-0010 October 7th-9th, 2019 – ENS Lyon (France) OUTLINE Background Scientific application and results • A climate change and societal evolution context • Water quality and chemistry (contaminants) • Research in Nunavik digest • Ecological study (Arctic greening) • Interactive mapping (CBEM) Motivation Conclusions and outlook • OHMI-Nunavik and Imalirijiit project design • Take home message International Symposium of LabEx DRIIHM 2 Inter-Disciplinary Research Facility on Human-Environment Interactions - ANR-11-LABX-0010 October 7th-9th, 2019 – ENS Lyon (France) Background Climate trends • A worrying context for Arctic and Subarctic regions : Since 2000, Arctic surface air T° increased at more than double the global average. Winter (January-March) near-surface temperature positive anomalies of +6°C (relative to 1981-2010) recorded in the central Arctic during both 2016 and 2018. Tomorrow (2050): +4-7°C mean annual year T° in the Arctic Winter pan-Canadian temperatures, long-term-trend 1948-2016 Source : Summary Report, Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC), IPCC, Sept 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • Study of Gender-Based Violence and Shelter Service Needs Across Inuit Nunangat
    Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada Study of Gender-based Violence and Shelter Service Needs across Inuit Nunangat Final Report March 2019 1 Nicholas Street, Suite 520 Ottawa, ON K1N 7B7 T: 613-238-3977 or 1-800-667-0749 www.pauktuutit.ca [email protected] © 2019 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without express written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews and reference must be made to Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada and the co-authors Dr. Quinless and Dr. Corntassel. Study of Gender-based Violence and Shelter Service Needs across Inuit Nunangat Preface It was important to the research team that this study be community driven and uphold the values of Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada and the Inuit women that the organization serves. Throughout the project, efforts were made to uphold the Inuit-specific values of Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ) in each of the seven communities and three urban centres where the research was conducted, including: Yellowknife and Inuvik in the Inuvialuit region of the Northwest Territories; Nain in Nunatsiavut and Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Newfoundland and Labrador; Kuujjuaq and Montreal in Quebec; Cape Dorset, Iqaluit and Clyde River in Nunavut; and, Ottawa in Ontario. The writing of this report is based in responsive research which braids together Inuit knowledge, community-based practices, and western scientific research methods to ensure that the research approach is safe for participants,
    [Show full text]
  • ARTICLE Having Covered Over 8700 Km Including 1600 Km on Foot, Over 4700 Km in Canoe, 800 Km by Dog Team and 1600 Km by Steam- Er
    GEOSCIENCE CANADA Volume 45 2018 43 ARTICLE having covered over 8700 km including 1600 km on foot, over 4700 km in canoe, 800 km by dog team and 1600 km by steam- er. The report from the expedition provides a compendium on the natural history of the region as well as the first geological maps. In terms of economic and scientific results, the greatest was documentation of the vast iron ore deposits of western Labrador; a world-class mining district that has been produc- ing for sixty-three years since 1954. Low’s account also pro- vides details on the essence of such an epic journey, which stands as a classic in the annals of Canadian geological survey- ing. RÉSUMÉ En 1893–1894, Albert Peter Low de la Commission géologique du Canada, accompagné du D.I.V. Eaton et quatre assistants autochtones ont exploré la péninsule du Labrador, Albert Peter Low in Labrador– alors perçue comme l'une des dernières grandes étendues A Tale of Iron and Irony sauvages inexplorées d’Amérique du Nord. L’équipe a quitté le Lake St. John (aujourd'hui le lac Saint-Jean) le 17 juin 1893, a traversé la bordure nord-est du continent nord-américain en Derek H.C. Wilton canoë, et est arrivé à Fort Chimo (aujourd'hui Kuujjuaq) le 27 août 1893. À l'automne de 1893, ils ont quitté Fort Chimo à Department of Earth Sciences bord d'un vapeur pour Rigolet, sur la côte du Labrador, et le Memorial University of Newfoundland poste de la Compagnie de la Baie d'Hudson sur la rivière St.
    [Show full text]
  • Presentation for Madhu's Class
    Inuit Health + Circumpolar Health Andrew Bresnahan MD, MSc, MPH, FRCGS November 2019 PPHS 511: McGill University, Dr. Madhu Pai Fundamentals of Global Health • Interactive • history of global health • global health governance • global burden of disease • global health ethics, • global health diplomacy and advocacy. Learning Objectives • Who? ᑭᓇ Terminology, positionality, ethics • Where? ᓇᒥ Considering the spatial + social • When? ᖃᖓ Historic origins of social determinants of health • What? ᓱᓇ Inuit governance + Inuit health • How? ᖃᓄᖅ Decolonizing practice + ᑭᓇ Who? + ᓱᓇ What? • Terminology • Health equity in Inuit Nunangat and Canada • Positionality • Case studies: • Ethics • Infectious disease: Tuberculosis • Non-communicable disease: Diabetes + ᓇᒥ Where? • Mental health: Suicide • Considering the spatial + social + ᖃᓄᖅ How? • Inuit governance (cf. global health ᖃᖓ governance) + When? • Inuit democracy • Arctic migrations, Inuit odyssey • Inuit-Crown relationship • Colonization and decolonization • Ethical practice It's one thing to say, “Hey, we're on the territory of Anishinaabek and the Haudenosaunee.” It's another thing to say, "We're on the territory of the Anishinaabek and the Haudenosaunee and here's what that compels me to do.” Hayden King yellowheadinstitute.org @yellowhead “I want to start by discussing something that I think a lot about. This is a traditional practice that I want to follow, that Inuit elders from across Inuit Nunangat have stressed. You speak about what you have experienced, and you don’t speak about what you have not seen or experienced. And that’s a really challenging thing to follow.” Natan Obed Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami itk.ca ᑭᓇ Who? “How to talk about Indigenous people” Simple Rules: 1. Be as specific as possible.
    [Show full text]
  • Kangiqsualujjuaq 2020 EN
    History Kangiqsualujjuaq, often called George River, is the easternmost village in Nunavik. It is located 160 km away from Kuujjuaq KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ and 1675 km away from Montreal. In the 19th century, a trading post of the Hudson Bay Company was established 12 km south of the current location of the village, which was created only in 1962 when the Inuit decided to settle there, especially Address: PO Box 120, Kangiqsualujjuaq for arctic char trade. Kangiiqsualujjuaq Quebec J0M 1N0 Tel: 819-337-9090 Access Population Economic activities: Arts and crafts, businesses and Kangiqsualujjuaq can be reached by Kangiqsualujjuaq means "the very large bay" in Inhabitants: around 1200 services, tourism, construction, Inuktitut, dut to its position at the end of George plane by taking a Canadian North flight from Montreal/Quebec to Kuujjuaq then Languages spoken: Inuktitut, transport, outfitters, traditional caribou, River bay. an Air Inuit flight from Kuujjuaq to English seal and beluga hunting, fishing Kangiqsualujjuaq. Services Clinic Coop grocery store Coop hotel Community centre Niriviapik restaurant Temperatures Other services: 30 Arena (with gym and swimming-pool) 20 Northern Store Museum 10 Daycare 0 Post office -10 Full Gospel Christian Fellowship (Pentecostal church) St-Andrews Anglican Church -20 FM community radio -30 Junior Rangers (Canadian Armed Forces) January April June October Address: PO Box 120, Kangiqsualujjuaq Quebec J0M 1N0 The clinique Tel: 819-337-9090 Nursing staff: 6-7 Home Care Fax: 819-337-9004 Activities and attractions 1 E-mail: [email protected] Expanded COVID-19 role & TB Sports 4 1-2 Arena, mini-gym and swimming-pool Hours: CLSC open from Monday to Friday from 9am to 5pm, emergency services evening/night/weekend.
    [Show full text]
  • Transportation Plan of Nord-Du-Québec I
    TRANSPORTATION PLAN OF NORD-DU-QUEBEC PREANALYSIS Final work document April 2002 Luc Adam, Service des liaisons avec les partenaires et usagers, DATNQ Adami Alaku, Administration régionale Kativik Luc Ampleman, agent de recherche, Services des inventaires et plan, DATNQ Josée Arseneault, coordonnatrice aux affaires autochtones, MTQ François Beaudry, secrétariat général, MTQ Michelle Bélanger, agente de bureau, DATNQ Denis Blais, chef de service, Services des inventaires et plan, DATNQ Andrée Champagne, agente de secrétariat, Services des inventaires et plan, DATNQ Martin Desgagnés, bureau du Grand Conseil des Cris Daniel Dorais, directeur, DATNQ Luc Ferland, Conseil régional de développement de la Baie James Mario Grenier, chef de service, Centre de services d’Amos Anick Guimond, agente de recherche, Services des inventaires et plan, DATNQ Marie Lalancette, agente de recherche, Services des inventaires et plan, DATNQ Josepi Padlayat, Conseil régional de développement Katutjinik Charles Roy, chef de service, Centre de services de Chibougamau ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Transportation Plan team wishes to thank all those who, by their comments and suggestions, have contributed to the writing of this document. The document was prepared by the Service des inventaires et plan of Direction de l’Abitibi-Témiscamingue–Nord-du- Québec in cooperation with the Service des liaisons avec les partenaires et usagers of the Ministère des Transports. For any further information, please contact: Ministère des Transports Service des inventaires et plan 80, avenue Québec Rouyn-Noranda (Québec) J9X 6R1 Telephone: (819) 763-3237 Fax: (819) 763-3493 E-mail: www.mtq.qc.ca/regions/abitibi/plan_nord-en.html Website: [email protected] TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • THE Nunavik INUIT
    THE NUNAVIK INUIT POPULATION AND TERRITORY THE DEVELOPMENT OF NUNAVIK SINCE 1975 AND MAJOR CURRENT ISSUES • In Québec, the Inuit reside in Nunavik, a semi-arctic and arctic region th located north of the 55 parallel. • In 1975, the Inuit, the Cree, Québec and the federal government concluded the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement (JBNQA). - Over the last three centuries, contacts between Europe and Nunavik were largely maintained by Anglican missionaries, fur traders and the - For a quarter of a century after this, JBNQA shaped the political, Hudson Bay Company. economic, social, legal and institutional world of Northern Québec. - The Inuit were a nomadic people. They adopted a settled lifestyle at • For the Inuit, economic development, preservation of their culture and the beginning of the Fifties. language, improvement of public health and education, elimination of social problems (violence, alcohol and drugs, etc.) and the establishment 2 • An immense territory of approximately 500,000 km of a justice administration appropriate to the community represent the (one-third of Québec), Nunavik has a population of about 11,000, major long-term issues. of whom 10,000 are Inuit. • The first schools were established during the Fifties. Since the end of the - The population of Nunavik is young: 60% is under the age of 25, i.e. Seventies, the educational system has come under Québec’s jurisdiction twice the proportion in Southern Québec. and was placed under the purview of the Kativik School Board. - They live in 14 villages of between 150 to 1,800 residents. These - Inuit language and culture are taught throughout the elementary and villages are located along Hudson Bay and Ungava Bay.
    [Show full text]
  • KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ Mitigating Avalanche Risk Through Land-Use Planning
    22 23 KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ Mitigating avalanche risk through land-use planning By Sophie Guilbault Source: Wikimedia commons THE SCIENCE Snow avalanches happen when a mass of snow loses its attachment to an inclined surface, such as a hill or mountainside. While there are several thousand snow avalanches in Canada every year, only a very small percentage occur near communities, transportation routes, or recreational areas. When avalanches happen in areas where there is human activity, they can cause various levels of damage depending on their type, mass, path length, and impact pressure. Snow avalanches can be triggered by a variety of factors including wind, rain, warming temperatures, skiers, snowmobiles, etc. In Canada, avalanches are mostly known to happen in the mountains of British Columbia, Alberta, and the Yukon. However, some happen in other areas of the country, such as northern Quebec. In this remote region, the majority of avalanche incidents have happened on short and steep slopes (minimum of 30º incline) with a poorly vegetated plain surface at the top. These specific conditions are known to be favourable to snow drifting and the formation of overhanging edges of snow. THE TRIGGER One of the deadliest avalanches in Canadian history affected Kangiqsualujjuaq, a small Inuit community located in Quebec, on the east shore of the Ungava Bay. The village of Kangiqsualujjuaq was established in 1959 in a valley surrounded by a small mountain ridge. Given its northern location, the community is particularly isolated and can only be accessed by air transportation. Travelling in and out of the community in the winter months is particularly challenging, as flights to and from the village are highly dependant on weather conditions.
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Developments in Renewable Energy in Remote Aboriginal Communities, Quebec, Canada
    Recent Developments in Renewable Energy in Remote Aboriginal Communities, Quebec, Canada Konstantinos Karanasios and Paul Parker Northern Quebec’s 14 remote aboriginal communities are dispersed through the land of Nunavik and are entirely reliant on diesel for their electricity needs. This paper reviews Nunavik communities’ electrical systems, past renewable electricity projects, as well as available renewable resources for electricity generation. One renewable project was installed in Kuujjuaq in 1986, but despite the availability of wind and hydroelectricity resources, there were no subsequent renewable electricity installations in Nunavik. However, the need for alternatives to diesel powered electricity is recognized and communities are examining two options: the potential connection to the provincial grid to access reliable and clean electricity and the integration of renewable applications into local community diesel systems. The success of the Mesgi’g Ugju’s’n wind farm partnership with Mi’gmaq communities in Gaspe, and the Raglan Mine community scale wind turbine, combined with falling storage prices and technological advancements in controller design, could provide an opportunity for the development of high penetration wind projects in locations with high wind regimes, including some of Nunavik’s aboriginal communities. Keywords: Quebec, remote aboriginal communities, indigenous communities, renewable electricity, community ownership, wind projects Introduction There are 44 remote communities in Quebec served by autonomous electricity
    [Show full text]
  • Inuit Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Nunavik and Nunatsiavut, Northeastern Canada
    Université de Montréal Inuit ethnobotany and ethnoecology in Nunavik and Nunatsiavut, northeastern Canada par Courtenay Clark Département de sciences biologiques Faculté des arts et des sciences Mémoire présenté à la Faculté des études supérieures en vue de l’obtention du grade de maîtrise en sciences biologiques Décembre, 2012 © Courtenay Clark, 2012 a Université de Montréal Faculté des études supérieures Ce mémoire intitulé Inuit ethnobotany and ethnoecology in Nunavik and Nunatsiavut, northeastern Canada Présenté par : Courtenay Clark a été évalué par un jury composé des personnes suivantes : Stéphanie Pellerin Président-rapporteur Alain Cuerrier Directeur de recherche Thora Martina Herrmann Membre du jury b Résumé Les habitats uniques de l'écotone forêt boréale-subarctique dans le nord du Canada subissent les contrecoups du changement climatique. Combinés aux effets de la mondialisation, les changements environnementaux touchent les Inuits de cette région et imposent des contraintes importantes sur leur mode de vie traditionnel, ce qui a des répercussions sur leur langue et les savoirs qui l'accompagnent. Cette étude compare deux aspects de l’ethnobiologie inuite : a) les noms et les utilisations des plantes par les Inuits de Nain, Nunatsiavut, suivis par une comparaison des utilisations avec la communauté inuite de Kangiqsualujjuaq, Nunavik, et b) une analyse des types de lieux ou d’habitats que les Inuits reconnaissent et nomment. Des interviews semi-dirigés ont été menés à Nain, Nunatsiavut et à Kangiqsualujjuaq, au Nunavik. Les plantes mentionnées sont utilisées comme aliment, thé, médecine, combustible, construction, nettoyage, et autres utilisations. Les deux communautés ont utilisé un nombre égal de plantes, avec des proportions équivalentes de taxons vasculaires/invasculaires, de formes de croissance (habitus), et d’espèces par catégorie d'utilisation.
    [Show full text]
  • NV Contact List
    WATER BY-LAW OFFICER AIR NV’s OFFICE MAYOR / MAYORESS AST.SECRETARY- MUNICIPAL PHONE FAX SECRETARY-TREASURER HEAD MECHANIC DISTRIBUTION & & RECREATION HOTELS INUIT ADDRESS REGIONAL COUNCILLOR TREASURER MANAGER PUMPING STATION COORDINATOR AGENT Kangiqsualujjuaq David Annanack (M/RC) #23 Lizzie Annanack #22 (BLO) Adamie Bobby Etok 337-5270 Tommy Annanack #28 Johnny Ittulak Jimmy Jararusi Co-op office 337-5241 Box 120 Mun.337-5200 david.annanack@nvkangiqsualujjuaq. lannanack@nvkangiqsualujj Jim Stewart #26 bylaw@nvkangiqsualujju 337-5277 337-5203 [email protected] [email protected] 337-5242 (WDS) 337-5371 Co-op hotel 337-5404 J0M 1N0 ca uaq.ca aq.ca Luc Cormier Mary Ann Robertson Angma Angma Sammy Koneak (M) #223 Paul Gordon Auberge / Inn 964-2903 Kuujjuaq Admin.964-0734 Ian Robertson #229 [email protected] HEquip. Gar.: 964-0298 [email protected] [email protected] Mark Lefebvre [email protected] [email protected] Co-op hotel 964-2272 964-2914 Box 210 964-2943 Fin.964-0609 [email protected] Martha Gordon (RecM) Jessie Mesher Fax: 964-0734 [email protected] (PS) Co-op office 964-2990 964-2915 J0M 1C0 Recep.964-2980 Fax: 964-0609 [email protected] Aloupa Kooktook [email protected] Jobie Tukkiapik (RC) (WDS) 964-2988 Sinittavik Hotel 964-0131 Fax: 964-0609 Garage: 964-2769 964-1021 [email protected] Conlucy Kutchaka #26 Arqivik LHC office Tasiujaq replacement of Qasalluak Augiak [email protected] 633-9924 Billy Cain (M/RC) #22 Christian Peart # 26 Tommy Cain #30 (RecC) Jessica Cain #28 Box 54 633-5026 Vaijula Saunders (Mat. Leave) Willie Cain Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • Kangiqsualujjuaq Guidelines
    KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ ENROLMENT COMMITTEE POLICIES AND GUIDELINES (JANUARY 4, 2011) Page 1 Enrolment of Nunavik Inuit Beneficiaries of the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement - Kangiqsualujjuaq Affiliation - PPOOLLIICCIIEESS AAnndd GGuuiiddeelliinneess January 4, 2011 Date of Adoption by the Kangiqsualujjuaq Enrolment Committee February 9, 2011: Resolution No. 2011-02-09 Date of modification made by the Kangiqsualujjuaq Enrolment Committee KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ ENROLMENT COMMITTEE POLICIES AND GUIDELINES (JANUARY 4, 2011) Page 2 SECTION I OVERVIEW KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ ENROLMENT COMMITTEE 1.1 Background Following the signing on January 27 2005 of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA) Complementary Agreement No. 18 on Inuit Eligibility (hereafter CA. 18), the list of all Nunavik beneficiaries is managed out of the Nunavik Enrolment Office located in Kuujjuaq at the Makivik Head Office. The Nunavik Enrolment Office has among other duties to verse the lists provided by each community into the Nunavik Inuit Beneficiaries Register. Pursuant to the coming into force of the CA. 18, being on May 1st 2006, the rules of the Inuit Eligibility Regime were modified completely. The communities have now the responsibility to update their own community beneficiaries list via the work of their Community Enrolment Committee composed in Kangiqsualujjuaq of one Elder and of the Directors of the local Landholding Corporation. The Kangiqsualujjuaq Community Enrolment Committee applies its discretion in implementing the criteria listed at the C.A. 18, in order to take a decision on the application presented by an individual, or his/her legal representative for minors, under the guidance of the following principles: Nunavik Inuit are best able to define who is an Inuk and who is therefore entitled to be enrolled under the JBNQA, and; Nunavik Inuit are to be recognized according to their own understanding of themselves, of their culture and traditions; and; The determination and decision process of who is an Inuk for the purposes of the JBNQA is to be just and equitable.
    [Show full text]