Good morning. My name is Madeleine Redfern. I am an Inuk from the South Baffin region of Nunavut.
My work, past and present, is quite varied, stemming from business, law, politics and non-governmental organizations at the national, regional and local level. That includes the Indspire board, the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness, previously on the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, the Canadian Arctic Innovation Association, Inuit Business Council and more.
Canada's national security matters. Our democratic institutions matter. My journey into security issues truly began when I was the mayor of Iqaluit. I did two terms for Nunavut's capital city. While I was mayor, I was confronted with a lot of security issues, on a municipal, territorial and national level. Security is a multi-layered issue in Canada's Arctic. For us northerners, security issues are not just military or even just democracy. We have military infrastructure such as the forward operating location and military personnel in our communities.
In my first year as mayor, Telesat's satellite went down. Iqaluit and the entire northern part of Canada—from Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut to the northern parts of the provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec—had no telecommunications services. No one could call in. No one could call out. The Internet was down. You couldn't pay for your groceries or gas. You couldn't go to the bank; you couldn't get money from the ATMs. Planes were grounded, except for a few, which had to fly, of course, due to medical reasons.
Weeks prior to that, I read a report that stated that Canada's northern telecommunications system was at risk and that the situation was so dire it was deemed critical. Thankfully, Anik F2 was able to be brought back online within 22 hours. However, it heightened how vulnerable we are in the north when it comes to telecommunications.
In our communities, we are also dealing with energy insecurity. Several of our power generators are well past their 40-year operating life. As mayor, my community faced regular power outages. Power prices increased by 30% in those two years of my first term. The generators in some of our Nunavut communities have failed or been completely lost due to fire in the dead of winter, when temperatures can go down to -50°C. This happened to Pangnirtung, when it burned down to the ground in the spring—by your standards, still winter.
In Nunavut, we are dealing with over 80% of our water infrastructure in poor to bad condition. Our communities cannot build the much-needed housing or other buildings until the water systems are fixed or replaced.
My first water crisis happened in the first year of my term, when the water main broke in February. The city's senior administrative officer and the director of public works knocked on my door at 4 a.m. to inform me that, despite best efforts, for many hours, our staff and contractors had been struggling to fix the broken pipe. They were standing in rushing waste water in extremely cold temperatures, trying desperately to fix the pipe to save our precious water. We rely on a small nearby lake for our water reservoir, and the water we have in that lake in November has to last for the entire winter and spring.
Iqaluit is now in its sixth year of a local state of emergency because of the lack of adequate water. We're watching and living the collapse of our existing water infrastructure with continuous pipe breakages. Only two years ago, the city also faced an additional local state of emergency when our water was contaminated by fuel and the military was called in to assist.
Our northern leaders must deal with security issues from the local level to the national level. That's part of the work we do. You learn quickly to adopt a security mindset. I established a pretty good relationship with the police force, the Canadian Rangers and the military, including Joint Task Force North. I had to scale up my knowledge on disaster risk prevention and response.
Most of our vulnerabilities and security threats come from inadequate government policies and the lack of appropriate investment in our communities' infrastructure. What I also learned is that the type of infrastructure we need is the same as what is needed in the mines and by our military: telecommunications, energy and transportation.
I have made it my life's work to work on the intersection of sustainable development and security in the Arctic region and to understand the transformative potential of new technologies. Unfortunately, too often, government policies, programs and investment decisions for decades have contributed to our very real vulnerabilities, not just with respect to infrastructure but also our economic vulnerabilities.