Just a notion: Attawapiskat's in a treeless wasteland—to my southern cityboy's eyes at least—thousands of miles from the nearest urban centre. If the problems—which seem to be centred on housing—are so easily addressed, it shouldn't take long for a TERBexpert to point to a housing design suitable for building and maintaining at reasonable cost 'way up there'.
But if you need to buy—with money from what job or business—a tube of caulking, how far to the nearest Home Hardware? And when the shingles start blowing off the windward slope of your roof? And when did the roofer come by last to say, "Those shingles aren't gonna see you through another winter"?
What I see is totally inappropriate building forms for the environment and location. After more than a hundred years of 'looking after' our aboriginal peoples, I'd have thought the Department would have come up with a decent standard house design, that the local folk could build and maintain.
They were doing reasonably well before we came along and screwed things up for them. Time to listen, not dictate.
But if you need to buy—with money from what job or business—a tube of caulking, how far to the nearest Home Hardware? And when the shingles start blowing off the windward slope of your roof? And when did the roofer come by last to say, "Those shingles aren't gonna see you through another winter"?
What I see is totally inappropriate building forms for the environment and location. After more than a hundred years of 'looking after' our aboriginal peoples, I'd have thought the Department would have come up with a decent standard house design, that the local folk could build and maintain.
They were doing reasonably well before we came along and screwed things up for them. Time to listen, not dictate.