North

N.W.T. residents welcome reduced prices from Mackenzie Valley Highway, concerned over social impacts

Public engagement sessions are underway with residents of the Sahtu and Dehcho regions. Residents said the highway is necessary to lower cost of living, but express concern over environmental impacts and risk of rising substance use in communities along the road.

The $700-million highway project is a two-lane gravel road that would connect Wrigley to Norman Wells

A vehicle is seen stopped on a snow-covered road.
A rough patch on the Mackenzie Valley Winter Road between Norman Wells and Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., on March 7, 2019. (John Last/CBC)

The Mackenzie Valley Highway is still years away from completion but residents across the territory are sharing their opinions on the project. 

The Government of the Northwest Territories is inviting community feedback on the proposed route of the 321 kilometre highway, and spent last week engaging in virtual meetings with residents in the Dehcho and Sahtú regions.  

The highway, a $700-million project, is a two-lane gravel road that would connect Wrigley to Norman Wells, N.W.T.

Bobby Clement grew up in Tulita, N.W.T. — a hamlet that will be connected to the all-season highway. 

He said the project is necessary to bring down high costs of living in the community and the whole of the Sahtú region. 

"The price of fuel is going up," he said, "clothing, food, transportation, everything's going up."

Clement now lives in High Level, Alta., but while in Tulita he said he would often drive the ice road down to Hay River — over 600 kilometres southeast — to save money on groceries.  

He said the cost of food in High Level is three or four times less than in the Sahtú and that the highway is needed to reduce the costs of bringing in food and other goods. 

Public engagement sessions are underway with residents of the Sahtú and Dehcho regions. Residents say the highway is necessary to lower cost of living, but express concern over environmental impacts and risk of rising substance use in communities along the road. (CBC)

Clement said the highway is also necessary to have reliable access to other communities. 

He recalls a spring in 2019 when dozens of vehicles got stuck on the way back to the Sahtú from a hand games tournament in Behchokǫ̀. 

What would normally be a six hour drive took up to 30 hours for some due to winter road conditions becoming too muddy to drive through.

With warming climates Clement said conditions like those are likely to become more frequent.

As many as 45 trucks lined up at Blackwater Hill waiting for their turn to climb the muddied road. The drive from Behchokǫ̀ back to the Sahtú took up-to 30 hours for some. (Submitted by Brandon Orlias)

Melania Norwegian further acknowledged the pros of the project — lower cost of living and job opportunities chief among them. 

She lives in Jean Marie River First Nation, but her partner lives in the Sahtú and she said she "knows how expensive it can get."

But Norwegian expressed concerns over the development too. 

Environmental and social concerns

She said the highway risks bringing in drugs and alcohol and driving up addiction and homelessness in the communities.    

"We also have to consider Mother Earth," she said. 

"Mother Earth is falling apart because people are abusing it. Climate change is happening too fast because of roads being built, mines being built, gold, uranium, all these things being pulled out of the ground. So we're being impacted faster than we expected." 

Norwegian said she wasn't aware of the government engagement sessions but she hopes officials will ensure locals are being trained for the jobs the development will bring, rather than bringing in workers from the south.

Dave Beamish lives in Fort Smith, N.W.T., but previously lived in Norman Wells and spent years working on the ice road in Wrigley.

Beamish said he can appreciate the worry of rising substance use and crime rates, but that "drugs are getting through, road or no road." 

He said the pros of the highway far outweigh the cons, further emphasizing high cost of living in the Sahtú and naming tourism as another positive outcome. 

"I think it'd be an advantage for for most people," he said. 

Beamish was also unaware of the government engagement sessions.

CBC News requested an interview to get an update on the Mackenzie Valley Highway Project. A project manager, however was unavailable due to the engagement sessions. 

The sessions are a part of the highway's developer assessment report. Environmental assessments will come at a later stage of the project.