Yukon gov't, First Nation agree on road project in southeast Yukon - Action News
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Yukon gov't, First Nation agree on road project in southeast Yukon

TheYukon government and the Liard First Nation have signed a deal for the first phase of upgrades to the Nahanni Range Road. It will mean training and jobs for First Nation members.

Nahanni Range Road upgrades will mean training and jobs for Liard First Nation members

The Nahanni Range Road 'goes through the heart of Kaska territory,' said George Morgan, chief of the Liard First Nation. (Submitted by Paul Tubb)

The Yukon government and the Liard First Nation are touting a new agreement that's intended to improve access to amineral-rich area of southeast Yukon.

The planned upgrades to the NahanniRange Road were first announced in 2017, as part of the Yukon Resource Gateway Project a $360-million project funded by the federal and Yukon governments.

The new agreement means theLiard First Nation is on board withthe first phase of the Nahanni Range Road project, and will see direct benefits.The first phase will see $17-million worth of work done on the road, including the replacement of a couple of bridges.

"The road goes through the heart of Kaska [Dena] territory. A lot of our citizens exercise their traditional resource harvesting rights there," said George Morgan, chief of the Liard First Nation.

"Just from an engagement perspective, from a process perspective, I think this was a bit of a benchmark for the Yukon government," he said, referring to the agreement.

The deal means First Nation members will be trained and hired to do things like vegetation clearing, wildlife monitoring, and other work.A joint committee will also be established to look for ways to minimize the negative impacts of the project.

The Nahanni Range Road runs north from the Robert Campbell Highway to the Yukon/N.W.T. border. (Yukoninfo.com)

"We pushed hard to have a committee set up that will be funded," Morgan said.

"We'll look at the impacts beginning in phase one,and all the way through ...we need to make sure that the environmental and the socioeconomic impacts are considered."

'World-class deposits'

Ranj Pillai, Yukon's mines minister, says the project will benefit all Yukoners by improving access to "world-class" mineral deposits.

"From what's been explored, there's been some very significant deposits that have been found from gold, tozinc,and so on," Pillai said.

The existing road connects the Robert Campbell Highway, north of Watson Lake, to the Yukon/N.W.T. border. Two mining companies currently use the road for projects in the area Golden Predator Mining, and Selwyn Chihong.

Pillaisays it's important that First Nations are consulted and included from the beginning of the upgrade work.

'We're building a foundation that gets us the proper pathway, where everybody is respected,' said Ranj Pillai, Yukon's minister of energy, mines, and resources. (Chris Windeyer/CBC)

"There is a lot of things that have to be figured out before you start building a very significant road. So that's the work that had to be done," he said.

"In this particular case, we feel we're building a foundation that gets us the proper pathway, where everybody is respected ... It's a big balancing act for all of us, for the leadership at [Liard First Nation], as well as our government."

Work could begin in a few months.

"We are hoping that maybe we can get going on some work next summer, and put some people to work," said Morgan.

With files from Dave White