Keeyask site moved to red level of Manitoba pandemic response system - Action News
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Manitoba

Keeyask site moved to red level of Manitoba pandemic response system

Manitoba Hydro's Keeyask site has been moved to the red, or critical, level of the province's pandemic response system, the provincial government announced via Twitter Tuesday afternoon.

First Nations leaders question Hydro's transparency, want construction site shut down

The Hydro Keeyask construction site has been moved to the red level in the pandemic response system as 20 workers are now confirmed positive COVID-19 cases. (Manitoba Hydro)

Manitoba Hydro's Keeyask site has been moved to the red, or critical, level of the province's pandemic response system, the provincial government announced via Twitter Tuesday afternoon.

Twenty Hydro workers at the Keeyask site in northern Manitoba are confirmed positive cases of COVID-19, while another 11 workers are "not clear" as they await the test results to return from Cadham Provincial Lab, Hydro said in a news release Tuesday.

All close contacts are self-isolating.There are 59 workers isolating in dorm rooms at the construction site, the release said.

"We are acting quickly in accordance with the COVID-19 response plan developed for the KeeyaskProject and adapting that response as needed as we all are across Manitoba to stop the spread ofthis virus," Manitoba Hydro president Jay Grewal said in the release.

"Manitoba Hydro had already implemented the requirements of a code red designation whereapplicable prior to this declaration and we continue to work closely with public health authorities andour Keeyask Cree Nation partners to coordinate our response to these COVID cases, providing frequentand timely updates on the situation."

The first confirmed case of COVID-19 at the Keeyask site was announced on Oct. 25.

All workers at the site roughly 760 peoplehave been tested for the illness as ofMonday, and restrictions such as removing table seating in the dining hall and making workers eat in their dorm rooms have been put into place to reduce potential spread.The Keeyask site is about 710 km north of Winnipeg.

CBC News asked Manitoba Hydro for comment but was referred to the news release.

Red level 'unfortunate' for Hydro

The new restrictions at the construction site "means nothing" to Doreen Spence, chief of Tataskweyak Cree Nation, because she says the communities surrounding the site don't trust the information coming from Hydro.

"It's business as usual for Manitoba Hydro," Spence said.

"They're not being transparent andaccountable to us."

The Keeyask site isbetween several communities in northern Manitoba.In May,Tataskweyak Cree Nation and other community partners of the Keeyask project blocked workers from going to the site, partially becausethe communities weren't part of the ongoing dialogue about COVID-19 prevention at the site, despite some of their members working there,Spence said.

Fast forward to now, she says it's a similar situation.

"We're not involved and we're only called partners when it suits them," Spencesaid, adding that many of the restrictions that Hydro has put in place during the outbreakwere suggested by the community partners, and it took a while for those measures to be implemented.

Spence is concerned that Hydro does not have the Keeyask outbreak contained, and that all workers there are at risk.

Meanwhile, Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Arlen Dumas saidthe shift to red level restrictionsis "unfortunate that it doesn't bode well for Manitoba Hydro," but added he wasn't surprised to hear the news.

"I was brought onto the call yesterday, so it was quite alarming because there was such differences in what was being reported," he said.

"There was oneCOVIDpositive, there was five. Then all of a sudden it ramped up to 31,which is quite problematic because when you follow the regular formula of how many contacts that is, it's actually quite significant."

On Monday, Dumas told CBC News that he wanted Hydro to be more transparent about the situation. He repeated that call on Tuesday.

Dumas said the changing numbers and lack of transparency has led the First Nations to question what Hydro is telling them. He said he'snow wondering how much, if at all, the Keeyask outbreak has impacted northern Manitoba, where there are currently 164 known active COVID-19 cases.

Both Spence and Dumas wantthe construction site to shut down until the outbreak is dealt with.

"The leadership has asked from the beginning of the pandemic why this project has been allowed to continue. It's not online. It doesn't provide any power.So I don't understand why we wouldn't just shut things down until after the the the pandemic is over," said Dumas.