New fee for Nunavut tourists intended to benefit Inuit - Action News
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New fee for Nunavut tourists intended to benefit Inuit

Half the money from a new fee will go to administer the fee program, half will go to local communities.

Tour operators will have to pay to access Inuit owned land in Qikiqtaaluk Region

A tour group unloading in Grise Fiord. Groups of tourists wearing red suits are a classic sight in Nunavut. (Travis Burke)

The Qikiqtani Inuit Organization (QIA) has implemented a new fee system for tourists who visit Inuit-owned lands in the Qikiqtaaluk Region.

Under the new system, tour operators will be charged $150 per plane landing, and $100 per helicopter landing. Commercial guestswillpay $50 per day to camp on Inuit-owned land, and $25 per day to visit for less than six hours.

Half the money will goto the local hunting and trapping organization closest to the Inuit-owned land in question, and the other half goes to the QIA to cover fee system administration costs.

PJ Akeeagok is the president of the Qikiqtani Inuit Association. (Submitted)

The president of QIA calls the fees"trailblazing."

"We're a designated Inuit organization that administers Inuit owned lands," PJAkeeagok said."We feel this is the right approach to ensure the true benefits stay with Inuit."

QIA's board has long discussedhow to ensure Inuit benefit from the increasing number of tourists who visit Qikiqtaaluk, Akeeagok said. The region includes the Northwest Passage, and gets the most cruise ship traffic in Nunavut.

'Pretty reasonable': tour operator

Jason Matthews owns Wild Alaska Travel, a company that operates mostly out of Kaktovik, Alaska, taking tourists on boat rides to see polar bears. He's been in the industry for 25 years, and says QIA's fees are, "pretty reasonable."

The fees don'taffect Matthews' business,but as a tour operator who works withIupiat in the Arctic, he supports the feesin principal.

"I think it's great." Matthews said. "I think there should be some sort of monetary incentive for locals to open their community up to people."

Kaktovik is an Iupiat village of around 300 people. Matthews says his company does home stays in the community, and the boat tour captain is an Iupiat local.

Recent group looking for polar bears with Iupiat boat captain Robert Thompson in Kaktovik, Alaska. (Submitted by Jason Matthews)

"Whenever I'll talk with people about tourism the villagers there [ask] 'what's in it for us?'" Matthews said.

Matthewssaid the fees are expensive, but reasonable. He saidtheywill set the stage to encourage reasonable tourism as climate change allows more and more people to fulfil their dreams to visit the Arctic.

"I think it's a way of really sort of being selective of who comes in your communities," Matthews says. "People who really want to come into your communities will pay those prices."

Fees don't address all concerns

Akeeagok saidthe fees aren't meant to deter visitors, but since the fees are newly implemented he has no idea how theywill affect how people decide to visit Qikiqtaaluk maybe they'll try to visit Crown land instead, he said.

There's also no way to know how much money this will bring to local hunting and trapping organizations.

And, no matter the amount of money the fees bring in, Akeeagok saidan ongoing concern is whether or not money will make up for how cruise ships, planes, visitors and the waste they leave behind, affect the water and animals in the region.

Akeeagok does say that on top of the fee, there is still a strict application process for any company thatwants to bring people onto Inuit-owned land, and that it's up to the discretion of regional clerks to deny any application.

A further point of consideration that Akeeagok says continues to be discussed by QIA is how to mitigate the effects, and benefit from, cruise ships that pass by communities in Qikiqtaaluk without landing.

The Qikiqtaaluk Region of Nunavut gets the most cruise ship traffic, and QIA's new fee is meant to allow Inuit to benefit when tourists visit Inuit-owned land. (Crystal Cruises)

"Obviously we take very seriously the issue of wildlife being disturbed or artifacts being disturbed," Akeeagok says.

Any issue that affects Inuit livelihood in Qikiqtaaluk is under the purview of QIA, Akeeagok said.

"Climate change is opening up the possibilities available through tourism," he says."I'm really excited about the policy it's the first of its kind in terms of the distribution of the benefits, and it really sets out a foundation moving forward in terms of QIA administering Inuit-owned lands."