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IMPACT AND BENEFIT PLAN SIGNED TO EXPAND TUKTUT NOGAIT NATIONAL PARK OF CANADA

DELINE, NORTHWEST TERRITORIES, August 1, 2005 -- The Honourable Stéphane Dion, Minister of the Environment and Minister responsible for Parks Canada, and Mr. Raymond Taniton, President of the Deline Land Corporation and representing the Sahtu Dene and Métis of the Sahtu Settlement Area, today signed an impact and benefit plan that will add an additional 1,850 km2 to the southern regions of Tuktut Nogait National Park of Canada. The plan was also signed by the Honourable Ethel Blondin-Andrew, Minister of State for Northern Development and Member of Parliament for Western Arctic, and Chief Walter Bayah of the Deline First Nation.

“With this agreement, we have taken an important step toward the completion of Tuktut Nogait National Park,” said Minister Dion. “By expanding the park into the Sahtu Settlement Area, we are providing additional protection to the habitat of the Bluenose caribou herd, which is so important to the Sahtu Dene and Métis people, creating local economic opportunities that will contribute to the vitality of Aboriginal communities in the region, and protecting this unique natural region of Canada for all Canadians.”

“The agreement we signed today supports the environmental objectives of our Northern Strategy and creates new economic opportunities for the Sahtu Dene and Métis,” said Minister Blondin-Andrew. “It also offers a new opportunity for local Aboriginal communities to be involved in the management of the park.”

“Today we have ensured that the calving grounds of the Bluenose caribou herd, which have played an important role in the lives of our people for thousands of years, will be protected” said Mr. Taniton. “This is a special day and a special place for the people of the Sahtu region, a place that will be protected for the next generation of our people.”

"Our ancestors’ left their imprints on the land many years ago and today we are here to acknowledge them and celebrate our future,” said Chief Bayha.

Tuktut Nogait National Park of Canada was established by Parliament in 1998 as a result of an agreement that was signed in 1996 by the Government of Canada, the Government of the Northwest Territories, the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation and the Inuvialuit Game Council. Approximately 16,340 km2 of the Tundra Hills Natural Region of the national park system were protected through the agreement, which also provided for the future expansion of the park into the Sahtu Settlement Area to the south and into Nunavut to the east.

The park’s primarily arctic tundra and barren lands are currently home to rich populations of caribou, musk oxen, grizzly bears, wolves, red foxes, wolverines, arctic ground squirrels, and collared lemmings, as well as to migratory birds, including peregrine falcons and golden eagles, and to fish such as arctic char, grayling and lake trout. It is also the site of the undisturbed remains of an ancient shoreline.

There are more than 360 archaeological sites found in Tuktut Nogait National Park, including ancient tent rings and caches. Its rugged arctic landscape, rolling uplands, deep canyons, clear rivers and spectacular waterfalls offer stunning views, and unique opportunities to experience nature. From late June to the end of July, brightly coloured wild flowers abound.

Negotiations toward the expansion of the park into the Sahtu Settlement Area were initiated in 2000 at the request of the Sahtu Lands Corporation. With the agreement and the addition of Sahtu Settlement Area lands to the park, it will now protect the tablelands of the Hornaday River Plateau and areas of spruce forest, as well as offer further protection to the headwaters of the river and to the calving grounds of the Bluenose caribou herd.

The agreement also contains provisions to enhance and support local employment and businesses, and to foster collaboration between the local community and Parks Canada in the operation and management of the lands added to Tuktut Nogait National Park. As well as encouraging the integration of traditional ecological knowledge into future park planning and decision-making, the agreement ensures the continuation of Sahtu Dene and Métis traditional wildlife and plant harvesting activities within the addition.

“Aboriginal people have been living here for millennia,” said Minister Dion. “Their unique knowledge of these lands, and of how to use them in a sustainable way is invaluable. Their understanding of the changes that have occurred in the north due to climate change, pollution and other stressors, and their traditional knowledge, can help us to protect the ecological health of the park and to present its story to Canadians. Today is about collaboration, and working together toward shared goals.”

Another key aspect of the agreement are its provisions to foster greater understanding and respect for the Sahtu Dene and Métis’s culture and heritage, as well as for the region’s cultural resources. The Sahtu Settlement Area is home to three national historic sites of Canada, including Sahoyúé-§ehdacho – which are of great spiritual and historical significance to the Sahtu Dene – as well as the Déline Fishery and Franklin’s Fort.

The addition of lands in the Sahtu Settlement Area to Tuktut Nogait National Park of Canada was part of the Government of Canada’s 2002 Action Plan to Protect Canada’s Natural Heritage. This plan commits the Government to establish 10 new national parks of Canada and five new national marine conservation areas of Canada by the end of 2008, as well as to expand three existing national parks. Tuktut Nogait is the first national park to be expanded under the plan, which also led to the establishment of Gulf Islands National Park Reserve of Canada and Ukkusiksalik National Park of Canada in 2003.

Information:

André Lamarre
Director of Communications
Office of the Ministerof the Environment
(819) 997-1441

Josianne Jalbert
Media Relations Office
Parks Canada
(819) 994-3024


Backgrounders associated with this News Release.