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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Resources North workshops building regional consensus on economic issues

Melanie Karjala, Acting General Manager for the Resources North Association, discusses an active agenda for the organization in 2012. At Resource North, she explains, “We have multiple sectors on the board, including people from  forestry, mining, oil and gas, and First Nations, and also we have academia, communities, small business, and there are projects with local education institutions.”

Resources North started in 1992 as the McGregor Model Forest and in 2007 was merged with Integrated Resource Management Partnership, an industry group working in Northern B.C., to create Resources North Association. It is run by a 16-member large board of directors and executive committee. 

Says  Karjala, “Our aim is to bring community stability and prosperity through sustainable resource management. We have four key theme areas: Community engagement, Expanding the knowledge base, Operational integration, Communications and extension,” she says, “one of our roles is to get information out to the people who can use it.

 “Our focus is on collaboration. In order to achieve it, we focus on bringing people together to work on solutions in our four theme areas. The full board meets quarterly and executive meets every six weeks roughly. Stephanie Killam, is the chair, and Mayor of Mackenzie, B.C., and she is very involved in meetings and outreach as well as attendance at all executive and board meetings”

A new communications strategy has been drafted by a contracted senior strategist, “and we are doing a lot of work on building a re-conception of our business model and preparing a communications strategy, and the board approved a new five-year strategic plan in December for new fiscal year in April 2012.”

 Resources North stages workshops in the region and coming in March 2012, RNA is holding workshops on Agro-forestry. “The goal is to build capacity for agro-forestry expansion in northern B.C., building on a workshop we gave in 2009.Agroforestry is the planned integration of agriculture and forestry practices occurring on the same plot of land, which combines agriculture, silviculture, and conservations practises to produce systems such as alley cropping, integrated riparian management, shelter belts, and silvo-pasture, which is growing trees in a farm towards producing a wood product, perhaps Christmas trees, or birch syrup. Agroforestry presents an opportunity to diversify northern economies”

She says people wanted more northern examples about the best crops for this northern latitude and more education on land management. “We got funding from the Agroforestry Development Institute and the Omenica Beetle Action Coalition to develop a community of practice, and we are having the first meeting this week to organize the workshop. We’d like to get at least 50 people per event.” The workshop will be followed by a series of learning events including field tours, short courses, to build skills and knowledge about Agroforestry.

The next set of priorities for workshops is to discuss the recruitment and retention of a labour force in natural resources industries, “and it will be a big topic in the region.”

The workshop will bring together existing initiatives, barriers and solutions for labour recruitment and retention in the natural resources sector of northern B.C.. “We have funding from the Forest Products Sector Council to put on this workshop in April. The Steering Committee includes academic institutions,  employment agencies, professional associations, and private sector.”

The Forest Products Sector Council provided analysis of labour needs and reported the shortage of personnel will be in the area between 40,000 to 120,000 the forestry sector alone as the decade proceeds. “In order to maintain economic activity we need enough people trained. Among other topics, we want to explore the nontraditional or untapped labour market, including people with disabilities, women, career changers and First Nations.”

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Mid-Island’s three biggest First Nations signed 2011 deal with Marine Harvest

One of the first commercial fisheries to turn to aquaculture was Klemtu, and the people have never looked back since making the investment in processing fish for Marine Harvest Canada . The Atlantic salmon are farmed in Kitasoo/XaiXais waters. Klemtu community on Swindle Island has a fishery-conscious labour force that MHC draws on for employees.

Other community members work at Kitasoo Seafoods Ltd.. Klemtu leadership created conditions that put MHC on- site. Klemtu community participates from environmental to fiscal level of seafood operations. They are there to monitor their traditional waters. This well-balanced arrangement continues to deliver economic and social benefits.

At the end of June 2011 MHC and three Central Island First Nations concluded three years of discussions intending to guide the operations of salmon aquaculture in their territories. On June 24th, the We Wai Kai, We Wai Kum and K’omoks First Nations celebrated signing of a capacity-building agreement with MHC. The agreement requires environmentally sustainable practices, provides economic and investment opportunities for the First Nations.  

“We are very pleased to start a positive relationship between Marine Harvest Canada and our people,” says Chief Ralph Dick of the Wei Wai Kai Nation. “It’s important that we have input into how companies operate within our territory since they are already here,” states Chief Robert Pollard of the Wei Wai Kum Nation, “and the best way to have our say is to work collaboratively. This agreement provides that opportunity.” 

A spring 2011 announcement by the Aboriginal Aquaculture Association is receiving positive feedback on the west coast. The Aboriginal Principles for Sustainable Aquaculture (APSA) standard of certification has been applied to Mainstream Canada, and, according to proponents, “other aquaculture companies are inquiring about certification. 

Richard Harry is president of the AAA, “We need to make the world understand and appreciate First Nations communities operating in aquaculture. It is the biggest employer in our communities. There are jobs for people which  sustains communities, and we are  partners in these endeavors.”

Harry notes, “Fish farming is probably the most over-regulated industry in the country. To us, it`s operation standards that matter. And where the industry goes we need to be part of it. Fiirst Nations and the companies involved will lead the APSA program. But the market place itself is probably the most important place.” 

He says, “It`s the people who accept this form of certification that will do the promotion. I don`t know if it`s ever happened that a First Nation certification of an industry has occurred.”  Ahousaht is engaged in the aquaculture and fish farm industry, “This is a good first example of implementation. 

In the Alberni Valley is the Sarita River, lands and waters of the Nuu Chah Nulth nation, where once a richness of Chinook salmon resources was unsurpassed. Sarita was a  special project done by Omega Pacific Hatchery with financial help from Huu Ay Aht First Nation (Sarita is part of their traditional territory), sponsorship from Creative Salmon and other fish farm companies working to release 50,000 wild Chinook salmon, April 12, 2011.

To make salmon resources thrive again, production capacity of Omega Pacific Hatchery was employed in a special project to release 50,000 ‘S-One’ Chinook salmon smolts. Stephan Ochman is the 14 year fisheries manager of Huu Ay Aht, and says the April 2011 release in Sarita River was the outcome of long term process to rehabilitate the fishery in the watershed. “These fish will return as three or four year olds.”

Pacific Coast aquacullture economy a major growing concern

The multi-million dollar aquaculture industry on the west coast is more and more becoming a billion-dollar industry, with growing facets in species, markets, and investors. First Nations on the coast are big players in the industry and the credit for the  way that came to pass belongs to the past. First Nations were the backbone of the commercial fishery in many areas. They have a substantial number of licensees participating in commercial fisheries today. Depleting resources could be a threat to every license,  however.

One of the first commercial fishery players to turn to aquaculture was Klemtu, and the people have never looked back since making the investment in processing fish for Marine Harvest Canada . The farmed  Atlantic salmon are grown in Kitasoo/XaiXais waters. Klemtu community on Swindle Island has a fishery-conscious labour force that MHC draws on for employees in the pen-sites.Other community members work at Kitasoo Seafoods Ltd. processing plant. Klemtu leadership created conditions that put MHC on- site. Klemtu community participates from environmental to fiscal level of seafood operations. They are as ever there to monitor things in their traditional waters. This well-balanced arrangement continues to deliver great economic and social benefits.

More recently, at the end of June 2011,  MHC and three Central Island First   Nations concluded three years of discussions intending to guide the operations of salmon aquaculture in their territories.  On June 24th, the We Wai Kai, We Wai Kum and K’omoks First Nations celebrated the   signing of a capacity-building agreement with Marine Harvest Canada. The agreement requires environmentally sustainable practices, provides economic and investment opportunities for the First Nations. 

“We are very pleased to start a positive relationship between Marine Harvest Canada  and our people,” says Chief Ralph Dick of the Wei Wai Kai Nation. “It’s important that we have input into how companies operate within our territory since they are already here,” states Chief Robert Pollard of the Wei Wai Kum Nation, “and the best way to have our say is to work collaboratively. This agreement provides that opportunity.” 

The signing increases the total number of agreements between Marine Harvest and coastal First Nations to ten. “Marine Harvest recognizes the importance of working with local First Nation bands,” said  Vincent Erenst, Managing Director at Marine Harvest Canada. “We look forward to working with our partners to ensure that our business promotes sustainability for our oceans, our economy and local communities.”

Collectively, the three Nations and Marine Harvest Canada represent a significant portion of BC’s aquaculture production – both shellfish and salmon. Marine Harvest Canada is BC’s largest producer of fresh farm-raised salmon and directly employs 550 staff. We Wai Kai, We Wai Kum and K’omoks First Nations represent approximately two thousand members and are in the shellfish business. 

A spring 2011 announcement by the Aboriginal Aquaculture Association is receiving positive feedback on the west coast where so many communities are dependent on a commercial fishery   that has declined to a shadow of it’s former self for several years. The Aboriginal Principles for Sustainable Aquaculture (APSA) standard of certification has been applied to Mainstream Canada, and, according to proponents, “other aquaculture companies are inquiring about certification. Richard Harry is president of the AAA, “We need to make the world understand and appreciate First Nations communities operating in aquaculture. It is the biggest employer in our communities. There are jobs for people which  sustains communities, and we are  partners in these endeavors.”

As a close observer of the industry over the years, Harry notes, “Fish farming is probably the most over-regulated industry in the country. To us, it`s operation standards that matter. And where the industry goes we need to be part of it. Fiirst Nations and the companies involved will lead the APSA program. But the market place itself is probably the most important place.”

Harry says, “It`s the people who accept this form of certification that will do the promotion. I don`t know if it`s ever happened that a First Nation certification of an industry has occurred.”  The AAA mission statement is to support First Nation sustainable aquaculture in ways that support and respect First Nation community culture and values. It means First Nation-approved aquaculture products coming onto the market. 

The AAA designed the criteria beginning with environmental performance of these companies and industries, “a performance that has to be better understand by public. But we also realized the need for monitoring social aspects of aquaculture, that we should focus on the economic impact in communities, and cultural aspects, asking if aquaculture operators are meeting needs in local communities.”

Ahousaht is deeply engaged in the aquaculture and fish farm industry so it makes a good starting point for a certification program, and, Harry adds, “Mainstream has been working with Ahousaht for long time to develop the relationship, in fact, signing a protocol agreemenl last year. They had a natural foundation for certification.” Thus fish farming received the first certification of aquaculture under APSA, but, “The whole idea is to go across all sorts of aquaculture.

“But this is a good first example of implementation. AAA`s goal is to have APSA applied to any form of aquaculture, operator, and First Nation across the country.” APSA audits the economic, social, water and land use, personnel use, and applies to aquaculture on the ocean, or land, including hatcheries.

In the Alberni Valley is the Sarita River, lands and waters of the Nuu Chah Nulth nation, where once was a richness of Chinook salmon resources that could only described as unsurpassed. To make the salmon resource thrive again, production capacity of Omega Pacific Hatchery was employed in a special project to release 50,000 ‘S-One’ Chinook salmon smolts, those that are raised in fresh water (at great expense ) to over a year old. These were released into the Sarita River with the sponsorship assistance of Creative Salmon of Tofino and other partners in the fish farming industry.

This was a special project done by Omega Pacific Hatchery along with financial help from Huu Ay Aht First Nation (for the Sarita is part of their traditional territory) and the help of a group of fish farm companies, all working together to release 50,000 wild Chinook salmon into the Sarita River, April 12, 2011.

Bruce Kenny and Carol Schmitt own OP, on Great Central Lake, not far north of Port Alberni, B.C., on Vancouver Island, where, Bruce said, “We grew the wild Chinook salmon to one year in fresh water, and we are making a concentrated effort to improve survival rates of hatchery released Chinook.” Growing S-One (year-old) fish is an arduous task, for they achieve a mere four inches of growth a year in fresh water.

Carole Schmitt worked on the Sarita River enhancement program to gather eggs in 2009 that were hatched and grown in 2010, and have now been shipped in 2011. Bruce says, “It’s a long period for wild animals to be in captivity, and people said to us, ‘Oh, they’ll be domestic by the end of a year in your facility.’ We released 6 km upstream with underwater camera watching, and they snapped into wild mode instantly.” The released fish, “Went upstream, came back down, stood around for two days, gathered under a bridge, and then all departed for the ocean.”

Stephan Ochman is the 14 year fisheries manager of Huu Ay Aht, and says the April 2011 release in Sarita River was the outcome of long term process to rehabilitate the fishery in the watershed. “These fish will return as three or four year olds. They are code-wire tagged so we’ll be able to see exactly, during brood stock capture, what percentage came from this Omega Pacific release.”

The Sarita River fishery has been sustained by the hatchery release of fish for many years, says Ochman, “It appears ninety percent of the fish that come into the Sarita came from hatcheries. There are very few native-born fish in the river.” The recent S-One release was done outside the usual procedure of hatchery release as operated by Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

“We are going to do the release of S-zero hatchery fish, about half-a-million as usual this spring. This release always gave us returns in the 1990s, during which we got 3,000 and 4,000 returns per year. In the last few years the returns dropped to very low counts. That’s why we tried a different method, releasing the S-Ones grown by Omega Pacific.”

S-Ones are grown 18 months in a tank of fresh water on reduced diets, whereas S-Zeros are hatched and grown for 6 months and released. There is a science to growing fish and DFO adheres to different science than OP, DFO releasing larger quantities of younger fish, OP taking eggs exclusively from native brood-stock and putting a natural cycle into early rearing and release. Ochman took part in the S-One release and says the Sarita River was gushing, visibility wasn’t good, and the fish were gone two days later when he went for the swim in his dry suit and snorkel.

Carol Schmitt explains the rationale behind developing the S-One hatchery fish, “Mother nature keeps them at least a year, sometimes three. The DFO S-Zero hatchery fish are released at six months because they make them grow fast, which triggers them to go into the ocean early. We are thinking the fish have to mature in fresh water longer in order to build up the physical stamina to survive in oceans.”

Omega Pacific one of the few independent hatcheries left, specializes in Chinook and raises eggs for export and supplies Chinook smolts to fish farms. “Our facility is beside the lake and the tanks are fed by a fish-free creek of mountain water,” notes Kenny. ”The entire facility is designed around the needs of fish. We have 30 years acquired knowledge. Carol has spent seven years developing a method of rearing and releasing S-One wild Chinook.”

OP is totally immersed in the raising of Chinook salmon from eggs to captive broodstock. They live beside the lake in the wilderness with salmon 24/7, 365 days a year. “We don’t have a 4 o’clock,” says Kenny. Carol says, “We go out to a stream with few returns and take eggs from the few back to the hatchery.” Kenny and Schmitt agree that ideal conditions would be to deploy satellite hatcheries that do egg hatches at the site from brood stock and reintroduces them to the native river.”

OP anticipates the S-Ones will have a higher survival rate amid the biology of a natural cycle in growth and timing of departure to sea. “We are hoping they come back to do natural reproduction on the stream, lessening the need to release fish by hatcheries,” so there it is a form of satellite-enhanced stream enhancement. Stefan Ochman says, “Now we wait three years to see the results.”

Carol Schmitt is an independent force majeure in the enhancement business and her knowledge grows from a lot of experience in aquaculture, including producing the fish presently swimming in AgriMarine’s new closed containment tanks afloat in the Seymour Narrows near Campbell River.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Fish farmers committed to protecting the marine environment

Since 2001, Grieg Seafood BC Ltd. has raised Atlantic, Chinook and Coho salmon at locations on the east and west coasts of Vancouver Island, and near to Sechelt, north of Vancouver. Its total employment is around 120 persons including its head office in Campbell River, hatchery operations at Gold River, and 15 farm sites dotting coastal inlets. 

BC's aquaculture industry contributes 6,000 jobs to the regional economy and is valued at $800 million annually. "Grieg Seafood is committed to protecting the marine environment where our salmon farms are located, an environment that is so important to aboriginal communities for food gathering, canoe journeys and other cultural practices," says Managing Director Stewart Hawthorn.

Hawthorn, who joined Grieg Seafood in 2010 and relocated with his family from New Zealand, managed similar aquaculture operations and established productive relationships with Maori groups in support of their own economic activities. "Grieg has agreements with several First Nations around north Vancouver Island and the coast. “My discussions with chiefs and councils have included how we can develop aquaculture training programs which lead to employment at our farm sites and at our hatchery at Gold River.”

“For some, our support contributes to a community's economic plans to manage their own shellfish aquaculture operations. Grieg's long-term success is tied to working with our First Nation partners, and toward their efforts to develop skills and capacity amongst their own people, particularly young families."

The industry believes that partnerships with First Nations can respond to the need for jobs in more remote communities. Many of these jobs are on the fish farms, and also in the support industries such as trucking and processing. "We recognize the public interest in aquaculture and in managing our farming practices well," continued Hawthorn. 

"And that is why we invite our Aboriginal partners to meet with us, learn about our business, and tour our farms to see first-hand how we take care to raise our fish. We also acknowledge that our partners are stewards of the waters where we operate." Hawthorn states, "Grieg Seafood believes in continuous improvement." "Our relationships with First Nations has benefited us in so many ways, including how we plan for our business, and how our aboriginal partners can share in our success too."

Anti-aquaculture campaigners with the Living Oceans Society are simply wrong in their recent criticism of our Plover Point farm site application,” says Grant Warkentin, Communications Officer, Mainstream Canada. “They are missing the key point that our new site is a better environmental choice than the old one it will replace. Our old Cormorant site is in a location which is not optimal for growing fish to harvest size and is used for smolt entry only. “ (Once the smolts in Cormorant reach a suitable size, they must be transferred to other sites.)

The Plover Point site, located in Ahousaht First Nation territory, was identified as a suitable replacement site in the protocol agreement between Ahousaht and Mainstream Canada because it is located in deeper water and in a better location with less risk of environmental impacts. It is appropriate for growing fish from smolt size to harvest size, “and will allow us to increase fallow times at other sites in the region, lowering our overall environmental impact while still maintaining our current level of production.”

The Plover Point site we have applied for will, if approved, replace Mainstream’s Cormorant site in their production plans. “The Cormorant site will be transferred to the Ahousaht First Nation, as per our protocol agreement with the Ahousaht government, for the Ahousaht to use for their own purposes.”
 

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Nunavut Connections, Inuit-owned transportation services for the Arctic

“Business will run essentially from Churchill where we have an office. We transport anything that comes by rail and ship to communities in the Kvaliut region,” explains Elizabeth Copland, Nunavut Connections President, "communities including my own, Arviat (pop. 2,800), second largest Nunavut community. Shipping is of vehicles, groceries, building materials, and other goods and equipment,” delivering to companies like the Northern Store, or Arviat’s local Coop, and the Independent Eskimo Point Lumber store.

Nunavut is building capacity for new industry and the communities decided to get engaged in the process, “We hope to build a training program and expand operations. We want to grow the company and improve end-services with a fuel tank farm, port maintenance and railway and marine services, and eventually construction services. We have a big port that has been used for a number of years.”

The Churchill harbour facilities employ office workers and 12 stevedores that work cranes and heavy equipment. They are all from Churchill. “I have family there, so I am in Churchill on a number of occasions through the year. We could be soon developing programs to recruit and train. Things are going real well since the launch of the new enterprise. ” Meanwhile, she lives in Arviat, “Our temperatures are pretty much the same with Northern Manitoba the only difference is we do not have any trees.

July 2011 was the first sailing of a ship served by Nunavut Connections with the opening of the sea-lanes, and the shipping into these areas will run till October, weather permitting. Copland notes that, “In the north mining is booming and other companies and groups want to take part or get involved. Our shareholders decided to form a company to get a piece of the economic development action.”

She adds, “We are very familiar with Churchill,” Arviat lying due north on the shore of Hudson’s Bay, “and Nunavut needs these opportunities for the young people, jobs involving skills and service to their own communities.” 

Nunavut Connections brings together a broad base of shareholders from across the Baffin and Kivalliq regions. "We believe this is the opportune time for us to partner with a well-established company such as OmniTRAX Canada," said Simon Merkosak of Pond Inlet, a shareholder in the venture. "Nunavut needs these type of ventures to benefit not only the people of Nunavut but also our young Nunavut government."

Eitan Dehtiar of OmniTRAX Canada explains, “Several Kivalliq and Baffin business people approached us with a way to work together in the north about six months ago and the planning came together to build employment, ownership, and improved reliability of service,” giving Nunavut region communities better control over expedition of goods.

The new business initiative provides a better ability for economic developers to manoeuvre around political situations, as well as giving the region an entrepreneurial leg-up on business conducted by southern companies presently directing operations in the north. “This scenario is different in meeting service levels required, and we launched with twelve stevedore jobs in Churchill, when, in mid-May 2011, we took on local staff.”

Part of the plan is to expand employment and employ-ability of personnel around the sea-lift capability and further developing year-long project support infrastructure in Churchill planning cycles. “We are pleased with the launch cycle that occurred this spring and summer, and I estimate that things are going fairly well. Our launch was well-received and by the end of October 2011 we will see the progress that was made,” says Dehtiar.

“The major effort this year has been to introduce the shareholders behind Nunavut Connections as a company that will move goods and services in the Kivalliq and Baffin region, showing continued support for the growth of these remote communities. The economic potential in the north is becoming very significant,” impossible to ignore.

The new company improves service levels and creates more financial viability to investors in other areas of economic development, such as mining. “We will have a much better sense by end of year of how the company will deploy in future during the short shipping season. The first ship sailed to various communities,” visited by marine carriers.

The goal is to expand, “ideally, across the board, for we want Churchill to remain a competitive port from a price perspective and a Nunavut business services perspective, and the focus is a considerable expansion of service levels in material shipping,” which requires, furthermore, an evaluation of infrastructure as part of the plan. “Churchill has existing facilities, the province of Manitoba is supportive, and we the province has have a Memorandum of Understanding with Nunavut.”

This development is perceived as a boost to Province of Manitoba’s capacity for economic development in the north. “We see James Bay area and the eastern shores of Hudson’s Bay as a potential part of the expansion and definitely part of this model of business activity.” Planning continues around the seasonality of the port. “In addition, we will supply air support to communities and make this a year-round part of operations.”

Monday, August 22, 2011

Tsi Del Del Awards from Good works, great training bring awards and prosperity

Tsi Del Del is the name of our community in the Chilcotin language meaning Red Stone,” explains Chief Percy Guichon.“ The company started 19 years ago, “out of need to put our youth in the major forest industry that is operating around us, as a way of ensuring we had a company and meaningful way to manage Red Stone resources.” The Assembly of First Nations (AFN) and the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) announced that Percy, Chief of the Alexis Creek Indian Band, and Tsi Del Del Enterprises of Chilanko Forks, B.C., won the FPAC/AFN  Business Leadership Award. Chief Guichon was honoured on Jul 14, 2011, at the AFN General Assembly in Moncton.

“We have a forest license, which started out jointly with major licensee at Williams Lake, Jacobson’s Brothers, bought by Riverside, now owned by Tolko Industries. The goal has always been to keep generating employment for members,” says  Guichon. “We have probably about 30 loggers and we operate in traditional territory with everything from skidders to hand buckers. Today we are fully engaged in all forestry operations including processors and bunchers.”

Tsi Del Dell is a road- side logging operation, stump-to-dump. “We have our own in-house forestry planning branch conducting block layout at pre-harvest, and now, including post-harvest silviculture operations, we are A to Z in forestry, including timber cruisers. We operate competitively on timber bids, often beating others rates on the bids.” The operations occur in the West Chilcotin area of B.C., and personnel in the company includes a key man educated as a Registered Forestry Technician who does all our consulting. Depending on project, we will consult others.” 

The Tsi Del Dell success has spun off other Band-owned businesses, including logging truck owners and operators within the Band. The core of operations run from west of Williams Lake by about 2 hours. Percy explains, “The other major component to our winning the award is from a certain percentage of the profit income generated being incorporated into training and skills development in the company. “Fifty cents per Cubic Metre of harvest is put aside for training and schooling for Band members in post-secondary education and training.”

The program of further education has produced personnel with a forest technician diploma, while another Band member  went all the way to get his masters in forestry, and the education component continues to grow. The Band is building capacity and social capital to prepare for new opportunities, including, “getting our more of our own Forest License.”

Operating successfully under the B.C. Forest Range department programs and the Mountain Pine Beetle uplift of timber volumes, “We get to put money aside for housing, which is essential because housing funding is inadequate from INAC.” The Band has 650 on the list, and only 350  get to live on-reserve. “Some would like to move home.” Tsi Del Del operations go from spring to break-up, ten months of the year, and silviculture work is conducted annually. “We are working under existing forest licenses and the Band will have it’s own awarded, to which we will be the sub-contractor.”

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Nupqu runs lean in growing forestry concern

Nupqu Development Corporation started on April 1, 2009, explains Norm Fraser, when Ktunaxa Kinbasket Development Corp was absorbed, “It became a new corporation and this was done for variety of reasons, when Nupqu took on the operations (of 13 years development) previously done by KKDC. Nupqu bought all the assets.”

In that context, history and experience of the company is much longer than the start date.  “The location is on St Mary’s Reservation outside Cranbrook, B.C., and the change in ownership was made to refit the corporation for new liability concerns. “We expanded, and the amount of business that was increasing is significant. “In 2006, under KKDC, we did $500,000 in sales. Last year we did $4.7 million in sales under Nupqu.” 

The expansion has been a boon to employment. “Last year we had 81 different individuals work  full-time or part-time, producing 81,000 hours worked,” the equivalent of 45 full-time jobs. It’s a work force that permits Nupqu to take on serious endeavors. “The bigger ones these past couple years? One is related to a BC Hydro transmission line, for which we’ve have had three different contracts. The centre-line slashing to start, then forestry consulting, marking boundary, road-planning, timber-cruising, assessing value of the forest as we did so, and thirdly, we are now clearing right-of-way and building access roads,” to a portion of the line. 
 
“The first two were whole contracts, all 115 km of line, the third contract is a partial road building contract on 6 KM section of the line.”  Another area of business activity for Nupqu is an annual contract with TransCanada Pipelines, “It varies from year to year. Last year it was 30-man contract for a month hand-excavating around the pipe, and doing other pipe maintenance jobs,” good paying jobs, “pipeline contracts pay well, and the contract is every year,” for the past 10 years.
 
“In other work we are more forestry-related, providing forestry consulting services for Tembec, doing all sorts of things, forest-planning work, locating cutblocks, road design work, forest health, danger-tree falling,” and this is an ongoing service agreement through the years since 2006, explains Norm. 
 
“In sliviculture, we are are contracted under the Forest for Tomorrow Program,” he says. “The idea is to reforest MPB areas or wild fires. What we do is some of the technical side,  surveys, and plotting, then danger-tree falling; we’ve done 5,000 hectares of danger-tree falling basically to clear the way for siliviculture workers.” That’s ongoing since 2007.
 
“Last year we had 45 different projects.” Nupqu runs lean, using a fleet of vehicles to move people to contract sites.” We don’t own of a lot of heavy equipment.” They subcontract and lease equipment in concert with demand. “We are working to develop the environmental side of our business. Teck Mining has five operating coal mines in our traditional territory, and in the past few years they have contracted the corporation to do revegetation, grass-seeding, noxious weed control, water quality sampling, and other duties,” in their fourth year working those contracts, “That’s seasonal.”

It’s the forestry opportunities that dominate, so, “Our winters are slow, We keep busy doing contracts on fuel reduction treatments around four reserves thinning underbrush, pruning trees, reducing the fire threat to communities,” by accessing provincial funding to make communities safer.

Four Ktunaxa communities own Nupqu, including St. Mary’s,  Lower Kooteney, Akisqnek and Tobacco Plains. “It all took place when one of the triggers was the provincial award of a Community Forest Agreement in 2005,” and suddenly they had capital. “What we had allowed us to develop the Tembec relationship. It allows for a lot of the job training and employment opportunities. We are moving people into positions, now having two Ktunaxa forest technologists on our staff,” and an education program continues on demand.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Industry training via Northern Manitoba Sector Council continues at pace

Doug Lauvstad, Executive Director, NMSC, joined when it started in 2007. “I came into it to work with government and industry in response to demand for skill labour in the marketplace. The program is northern-based and not exclusive to First Nations, but by the demographics of the north, it has been a big program for the Bands.” 

Lauvstad came to NMSC from University College of the North, “my previous employer,” where he was involved in the development of  training programs for 20 years in the post secondary world of education. He became active in delivering training to Aboriginal communities and Metis.” He is educated in administration of in post secondary education, born and raised in The Pas, “A city of about 7,000 people.”

The opportunities are open to all northern Manitobans, both genders, “primarily male taking the training, certainly,” and, “Typically they are people in their twenties. Those who enlist in the training enjoy a very high success rate. “The mine sector is particularly demanding a large number of employees,” but presently in Manitoba, hydro development is under way. “These are mega projects.”

Overall NMSC is engaged in employment development by training people with skills for use in an industrial setting, “So hydro is part of it.” The training demands are growing and NMSC is there to be a permanent agency. “We have three core staff members and then some contracts. We go year-round on the training. We get a base budget then we look for project funding.”

Don Nisbet, a program coordinator with the NMSC,  discussed the training model which partners industry, government and the UCN in delivering site training.  Typical programs include, Intro to Industry, Underground Miner Training, and Mineral Processing, and other.. NMSC works in  partnership with UCN and industry sector partners and northern communities  to find money, trainees, and jobs working in the various industries of mining, forestry, and electrical generation.

The upcoming mining academy opening in Flin Flon will offer classes later in 2011. “Premier Selinger paid a visit  to facilities under construction,” while travelling in the area in mid August. “The academy is still in construction and we have no official completion date but NMSC continues running programs,” and sees the opening of the Academy as a real enhancement to our efforts to develop a skilled northern workforce.

The Flin Flon-based academy is for training in the mining industry, “Training is mine-related at the academy, basically hard-rock mining, Training is relevant to the job opportunities found in Northern Manitoba.” The NMSC is an initiative that is trying to take advantage of the demographics, “ If the academy wasn't built we would still be training, however, this new facility will allow us to dramatically expand the range of programs offered, improve the quality of the programs currently delivered and lay the groundwork to become a nationally utilized training educational centre, says Nisbet.

Bucko Lake Mine, operated by CaNickel Minerals, has hosted several NMSC training sessions in the past few years that produced some 57 graduates and the plan is for more training to start early in the new year.  “Fifty one percent of the graduates are still working at the mine site."

Meanwhile the NMSC, which has been operating over four years, has also  worked with Workplace Education Manitoba in bringing basic essential skills to their industry focused training.  A product of this collaboration was the development of a custom entry level program entitled Introduction To Industry.

NMSC is working to “increase the pool of skilled labour from which we can draw, improving basic skills like math, and communications skills, then following up with more detailed training initiatives. We do not do it alone. We work with the resources we can find, often using agencies like Workplace Education Manitoba, industry partners, MKO, MMF, Training and Education Manitoba and UCN.

NMSC is mandated to continue in terms of the training and preparing a potential workforce for northern industry. The council’s member companies represent the largest resource based operations in Northern Manitoba and as such bring hundreds of potential jobs and career opportunities to people of the north.  For the most part the training is free for the selected candidates and they need only bring a commitment in time and energy.

Some of the training requires living in mining camps and involves relocation. Most candidates to date have received some form of training allowance either through their band, EI, or the MMF. NMSC training initiatives remain diverse in area and specialization, basically focusing of the specific  skills needed for the resource industries in northern Manitoba, be they related to forestry, mining or energy.

Falling and slashing is the game for Edziza

Clayton Burger is a Northwest Pacific born and raised tree faller from Iskut, B.C., taking his skills with a chain saw all over the province, all types of forest and species of trees. After 20 years in the business as a faller, he went to work as a foreman for logging outfit, which proved to be excellent preparation to, “start my own. This is our second year operating out of Terrace, B.C..

Moving from Iskut (Tahltan territory) came after doing the coastal falling jobs, “I spent ten years in camps, had two seasons of heli-logging. I have ten 10 fallers working for me now, anywhere between eight and 15, through the year, and it will grow a lot more. We are working even as far as Columbia Valley, on the transmission line job there.”

Edziza is working in Edson, Alberta, and Dawson Creek, B.C. and, “right where we are with the Northern Transmission Line project.” Any falling or slashing is the game, “Line cutting, right-of-way, seismic,  oilfield line, pipeline,” routes cut to make trails for industry, or government contracts.

Edziza is working on the Northwest Transmission Line survey of the centre line for the 300-plus kilometre transmission line project that proceeds from Terrace in Kitsumkalum through the Nass Valley and Nisga’a Nation, proceeding across Gitxsan into Tahltan territory.

“Weather’s been horrible,” miserable, raining or cold, but the crew of 12 continues to plug away through the wet conditions, “We started September 2010, and we are working on the project from point-to-point. I have a 12-man crew working on the centre line.” Most of the employees have been trained in chainsaw faller competency at his own company’s expense, by a company called Enform, and these men form the core of a company that is expanding operations to other principalities, including Alberta, and the north.

The NTL project involves doing the survey, and at the same time, cutting a walking trail the entire distance so engineers and construction teams or environmental monitoring personnel can access the route. “We are working with All-North Contracting on the survey job at NTL. I am also working on a program now in Nisga’a to run a training course for two weeks looking for chain-saw-experienced people with no tickets. We will get them out and prepare them to test, then they can pass the tests,” to be certified fallers in the region.

He says, “Business is good and getting better. We go year-round. We worked last winter in Alberta in the beetle control fall and burn program from January to March. and seismic lines. I expect that’ll keep us going again this winter.” The personnel is usually First Nation, “Most of my guys are from Hazelton, Nass Valley, Iskut, Kitimat, and Tsimshian, even Prince George. I just hired four more from Lytton and Kelowna area, since we are getting work down south on the Columbia Power project.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

AFOA has chapters across the country

Aboriginal Financial Officers Association of BC held the Annual Conference on Band Administration, June 28-29, 2011, a two-day event in it’s fourth year. That year it was held at the Coast Bastion in Nanaimo, B.C.. Mikes Meares is the General Manager of AFOA-BC, “People are not entirely aware that we helped develop the national organization.”

AFOA has chapters across the country, says Meares, however, “INAC support for the organization is lacking in some provinces. Manitoba and Ontario have no staff on board due to the lack of funding, and it’s difficult to run these kinds of training programs with strictly volunteers, even though that’s how we started out. We soon discovered you need a paid staff dedicated for it to keep moving forward toward the task of delivering financial training to Band administrators.”
    
The annual conference draws 60 to 80 people, and it is one of a series of conferences that the organization provides to Band administrators in workshop and specialized financial and legal  training sessions year-round. Says Meares, “We run three conferences per year, and offer six different types of community-based workshops. We have three staff in a model of program delivery that works to build capacity in our communities. We are able to say, facilitators welcome.”

He says networking is huge, “one of the biggest benefits from the conference, and building the facilitator network is constant within the organization. We are always looking for those who want to step up and deliver financial and legal skills training to First Nations. It’s a natural for those who hold accounting designations, financial management expertise, and legal backgrounds.” Faciliators receive a  small honorarium.
 
It’s essential training and Band administrators, “need people with expertise to talk to, so we are providing training to people for themselves to make improvements to the financial management of Band administrations all over the province.” Meares explains the AFOA-BC’s methods provide tremendous cost savings in the delivery of skills via 20-person workshops.
 
“The sessions are held by experts, (including law experts) and the facilitator is not costing us a fortune, so there is a huge cost-efficiency in our method, and the expertise goes all the way up to law and finance. We workshop on human resource (HR) issues as well, and we presently have one facilitator with a strong background on Human Resources issues.”
 
There are essentials in running an office, “and HR is a big issue in First Nations  Solid policies and procedures are essential to any organization. We are not in the business of fixing situations. Our goal is to put people into designations, and in terms of building capacity, nothing is more important than HR. We are equipping people in the organization to have the capacity to manage things in Band finance.”
    
Meares said AFOA-BC member administrators deal with Canadian accounting rules that change at pace, “and our staff and other financial auditors know the rules must be followed,” which explains the demand for continuous delivery of courses. Economic development doors are opening wide internationally as well, and First Nations will be required to follow international accounting standards in conducting new trade with countries in Asia and Europe. 
 
Meares notes that the national AFOA offices are instituting a public administrator program with a designation in band administration, curriculum now in development. “The CAPA program will  be rolled out in 2011 in the Fall.” See www.afoabc.org for more about AFOA-BC, started in 1996.

Cost efficiencies of geothermal meeting widespread approval

Look at housing and infrastructure and you should be looking at geothermal, says Inez Miller of Manitoba Geothermal Energy Alliance (MGEA). “It doesn’t matter where you look in the province, the business arrangements work.” Miller says, “Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs is expressing interest in geothermal from an overall planning perspective. They tell us it has a strong appeal based on funding, access to resources, and other issues that could make projects successful.”

MGEA wants to be positioned to address areas of concern expressed by AMC in workshops. She notes that Darcy Wood, AMC housing and infrastructure manager, made a presentation to MGEA this spring that contained a lot of statistical analysis about housing needs assessments. “It was an excellent presentation. Geothermal presents phenomenal opportunities and we learned about the issues around potable water that could be tied to geothermal systems.”

Brian Soulier works at AMC on geothermal issues, “What we did last March was host a workshop in a technology working group that focused on the economic development with people in finance, human resources, environment, and infrastructure or housing planning. Our workshops brought together First Nations to communicate about advancements in technology.”

One topic of discussion was geothermal, and Miller spoke about MGEA as did Ed Lohrenz, Vice President of MGEA, Ron Robins, MGEA president, “and Cross Lakes First Nation presented on their success story with a 38-unit housing installation in a district loop. Franklin Ross came with their contractor to discuss installation and the obstacles that were overcome.”

Soulier said, “Knowledge exchange with First Nations communities helps those who are interested and assists others who perceive it cautiously, stating that geothermal is too complicated or too costly. The expense depends on the priority of the community, those seeking good infrastructure solutions with long run cost efficiencies will find the economic capacity. We are advocating geothermal for the communities in Manitoba.”

Winnipeg Geothermal’s Ron Robins is serving president of MGEA. Board members are competitors and Robins is owner of a geothermal  installer company doing design and installation, conducting geological drilling assessments for heat exchange arrays for either commercial buildings or apartment blocks.

Friesen Drillers is owned by John Friesen, operating a third generation family business drilling in Manitoba since the late 1800s. Frieson is a board member MGEU, “We work all over Canada,” from an operational centre in Steinbach, Manitoba. “Drilling in the Canadian Shield is more expensive, even so, you get thermal conductivity in the shield that is higher than average, so it’s a positive geothermal situation that is more expensive to access with the same payback on BTUs, although the cost to drill goes up.”

Geothermal drilling occurs in rock, clay, limestone, any conditions. One of the important geothermal options is called an open loop, which extracts heat from a dedicated water well and returns the water to another well. “If you are in rural Manitoba and need a water well, you can use that same well to extract geothermal energy and drill an extra well to act as a return well. We do a fair bit of that. By nature our first love was drilling for water.”

Friesen says, “Geothermal provides huge cost efficiencies over the long term. In the urban environment, commercial geothermal installations provide huge energy savings in apartment blocks. Commercial arrays work for major manufacturing companies like Bristol Aerospace, which uses high heat processes in manufacturing and they take ground water out for cooling. Acquiring water rights for allows for licensing groundwater systems, a scenario for which we engineer and design systems, be they closed or open loop systems.”

Drills come from various drill manufacturers, and Friesen has a large number of different drills for the variety of jobs the company engages. “My company is now in it since 1892. I’ve been in geothermal since 1972 on the residential side and the commercial side since 1976. In the past five years residential geothermal has exploded into a major part of the business, and it keeps growing as more customers are able to justify the $18,000 to $25,000 upfront costs.”

Sealing the drilled loops is done meticulously with thermal-enhanced grout, which contain very low conductivity values, “We do bore holes up to 600 ft. in Winnipeg and around Manitoba, and the concern is always to preserve ecological integrity of aquifers, separate water tables, and to avoid contamination of fresh water by salt water aquifers.”

He notes, “We have to protect these water tables. Geothermal drillers are going through ground water and grouting creates the security, which takes time and money.” The company does extensive training of drillers, pump installers, and all facets of operations, with a staff of 65, including a hydrologist engineer, “a rare breed. There is lots of competition in the industry. We do a lot of training and skills development in drilling and various technologies.”

Lee Robins of CleanEnergy says, “We provide complete geo-exchange installation on large commercial projects.   The company distributes GeoStar Heat Pumps, which  are available with ten year parts and  labour allowance factory warranties, and a life expectancy of 25 to 30 years,

“Geothermal takes heat out of the ground in winter and releases it into the (building)., During summer it takes the heat from the building and releases to the ground. The dual purpose makes it more efficient - then there’s the type of loop weather it be it an open system, drilled, buried loops, or lake or ocean loops. We have in-house engineers that can provide complete design, energy analysis and life cycle analysis.  They work extensively in commercial projects, estimating proper heat and cooling loads estimating proper heat and cooling loads that contribute to an efficient environmentally friendly system.

Robins says, “The heat gathering loops are designed to serve the equipment, and loops are designed according to geography, as well as financial feasibility. Around the country recreation facilities are using geothermal  adaptations to rinks and halls or swimming pools to exchange heat, moving heat energy from one place for use in another. District loops are very good options wider community-use. I’ve been in geothermal since 1988 and I used to be surprised how long it was taking to get it started. Now the cost of everything related to energy is growing, and the green initiatives are part of the new equations.. Big innovations in efficiencies and quality of materials have made the geothermal investment better than ever.”

Crystal Thibeault is an executive on the board of MGEA and owns International Pipe Manufacture in Selkirk, Manitoba, which markets specialized pipe across Canada to both coasts, from Truro to Bella Coola, and places between like Berens River, Manitoba. Water pipe, electrical pipe, and geothermal pipe. “We put your pipe in the ground and manufacture up six inch pipe, and geothermal uses a technically proficient plastic pipe called high density polyethylene (HDPE)

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