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North

N.W.T. land and culture programs get $1 million

The organization says land and culture programming contributes to healthy communities, ecosystems and economies in the North.

Grants given out by the NWT On The Land Collaborative

Students from Chief Paul Niditchie School in Tsiigehtchic raft up. The school's annual canoe trip is one of 48 land- and culture-based projects that got funding through the NWT On The Land Collaborative. (Submitted by Chief Paul Niditchie School)

Programs that connect people in the North with their culture and the land are getting a collective$1 million boost.

TheNWT On The Land Collaborative is giving out the moneyto 48 land- and culture-based projects across the Northwest Territories.

The grant money is for programs thatfoster healthy people, communities, ecosystems and economies in the territory, says a press release from the organization.

Sonia Gregory, the principal of Chief Paul Niditchie School in Tsiigehtchic, said grants from the NWT On The Land Collaborative have allowed the school to run yearly canoe trips on Tsiigehnjik (Arctic Red River).

The trips bringstudents to areas on the river that are culturally and historically significant to the Gwichya Gwich'in people, said Gregory.

She said the 60- to-100-kilometre paddlealso builds the students' leadership skills and resilience.

Students at Chief Paul Niditchie School and parent visitors play hand games after a long paddle. The school's annual canoe trip is getting funding through the NWT On The Land Collaborative. (Submitted by Chief Paul Niditchie School)

"When you're on a trip like that, the kids have to become more independent and resilient, they have to rely on each other," said Gregory.

"They've been emotionally and physically challenged, and then they've been able to see that they could come through it."

Gregory said getting out on the land is expensive.

"To go up that river to those places you need a boat with a good motor and you need to have fueland you need to have time," she said. "Lots of people would like to get out on the land more than they dobut they don't have the financial resources to do so."

Shaylene Shae and Dayle Cole, Grade 7 and 8 students at Chief Paul Niditchie School, paddle through Jackfish Creek. (Submitted by Chief Paul Niditchie School)

Gregory said the school's canoe trip gives students in Grades 6 to 9 the chance to visit meaningful places and bond with each other.

"We have nothing but thanks for the On The Land Collaborativebecause without that seed money, there's just no way we'd be able to have something like [the canoe trips] happen in our community," she said.

This year's grants range from $2,500 to $60,000and are going primarily to Indigenous governments, schools and NGOs.

Projects to get fundinginclude Deline Got'ine Government's Tsa Tue Water Guardians Program, Pehdzeh Ki First Nation's language immersion camp, Tuktoyaktuk Elders Society's ice fishing program and the Inuvik-based Children First Society's First Steps on the Land program.

The NWT On The Land Collaborativeco-ordinates governments, charities and corporations to help N.W.T. communities get money for on-the-land programming.

Since it started in 2015, the organization has given out more than $3 million to 166 projects across the territory.