The how, why and when: N.W.T. government releases plan to hit 22 priorities in 4 years - Action News
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The how, why and when: N.W.T. government releases plan to hit 22 priorities in 4 years

The government of the Northwest Territories has released its 2019-23 mandate, which includes details about how and when the government plans to complete the 22 priorities established by the Legislative Assembly in October.

100 new housing units, 125 new jobs, natural gas extraction projects part of mandate

The government of the Northwest Territories has released its 2019-23 mandate. (Mario De Ciccio/Radio-Canada)

The government of the Northwest Territories has released its 2019-23 mandate, which includes details about how and when the government plans to complete the 22 priorities established by the Legislative Assemblyin October.

The priorities include addressing the high cost of housing and food in the North, as well as increasing employment in small communities andinvesting in sectors of the economy outside mining and resource extraction. It also wants to increasethe availability and affordability of childcare andtransformAurora College into a polytechnic university.

The mandate, released Friday, "describes what we will do, how we will do it, the time we think it will take, and how we will measure success," readsthe message from Premier Caroline Cochrane at the beginning of the document.

Below is a selection of the goals set out in the mandate.

Affordable housing and food security

One of the priorities laid out by the assembly is to increase the amount of affordable, energy-efficient housing units, especially for people who are more vulnerable.

Over the next four years, the territorial government is counting on funding, including from the federal and Indigenous governments, to build 100 new units.

For food security, the territorial government plans to createregulations by the spring of 2023 for people who want to sell locally harvested meat. It also wants to build a new fish plant in Hay River by the fall of 2023, and ensure the territory's Northern Foods Development Program includes funding for greenhouses and community gardens.

Jobs in small communities

The territorial government wants to add 125 new jobs in small communities, whether they areseasonal, part-time, or full-time positionsby the fall of 2023.

It also wants to immediately change the NWTHousing Corporation's policies so people living in public housing have the option to run an in-home business.

It also wants to increase the number of journeymen and apprentices in small communities by 15 per cent. It says it will do that by getting the Housing Corporation to leverage opportunities forpeople in small communities to learn a trade.

The mandate 'describes what we will do, how we will do it, the time we think it will take, and how we will measure success,' readsthe message from Premier Caroline Cochrane. (Mario De Ciccio/Radio-Canada)

Infrastructure and the economy

The territorial government has prioritized making infrastructure investments that will either expand the economy beyond the resource-extraction sector or reduce the cost of living.

Part of that includesincreasing the tourism sector, encouragingentrepreneurship and creatingeconomic developmentplans for all communities.

But the governmentalso wants to increase resource exploration in the N.W.T., namely withnatural gas.According to the mandate, the goal is to decrease the amount of gas that's imported into the territory.

The territorial government also wants to increase the funding for mining incentive programs by 50 per cent over the next four years.

The government also wants to better the internet quality across the Northwest Territoriesby completing the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link by the fall of 2021, and drawing up proposalsby 2022 for why other N.W.T. communities should be connected tofibre link.

Climate change, land claims and a university

The territorial government also wants to prioritize bettering its leadership and considerations around climate change, starting this year. It wants to do this by creatinga "climate change council."

The mandate doesn't include a specific year for when the territory will settle outstanding land claims, but it does say it plans to "demonstrate progress" by concludingtwo agreements.

The mandate also says the territorial government will create an action plan by the summer of 2022 for the changes required to N.W.T. legislation to better reflect the principles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The territorial government also plans to move ahead with transforming Aurora College into a polytechnic university. It wants this to happen in six years.

During this government's mandate, it plans to secure funding from the federal government to improvethe campuses in the territory, create an implementation plan for the transformation from a college to an accredited university, as well as release a capital plan for the university.