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RESOURCE GAP AND INITIATIVES ON FIRST NATIONS WATER AND WASTEWATER. FIRST NATIONS WATER SYMPOSIUM Hilton Hotel and Suites, Niagara Falls, Ontario March 9 – 10, 2010. The Resource Gap. Late 90’s OFNTSC Capital study Looked taking over the regional capital budget
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RESOURCE GAP AND INITIATIVES ON FIRST NATIONS WATER AND WASTEWATER FIRST NATIONS WATER SYMPOSIUM Hilton Hotel and Suites, Niagara Falls, Ontario March 9 – 10, 2010
The Resource Gap • Late 90’s OFNTSC Capital study • Looked taking over the regional capital budget • Result – foolhardy to take on an underfunded program
The CFM program • $1 billion annual shortfall • 2007 study commissioned by INAC showed a $15-25 Billion need in the next 15 years
CFM program • Assets on the ground increasing • Population is increasing • O&M is required to maintain these assets • 100% for schools • 80% for water & wastewater • 20% for community buildings
Water - Expert Panel The federal government must close the resource gap • “First, and most critically, it is not credible to go forward with any regulatory regime without adequate capacity to satisfy the regulatory requirements.”
IOG Summary Report on Engagement Sessions • “First Nations generally are no where near meeting provincial standards. Therefore, applying these standards now would be calamitous.” • Many regions made it clear that resource gap must be addressed first.
Recent Funding • FNWMS - $600 million • Budget 2008 - $330 million • Budget 2009 – CEAP $165 million (part of %515 million for infrastructure • Budget 2010 - Budget 2010 extends the First Nations Water and Wastewater Action Plan for two more years.
Other • FNIF – oversubscribed • GTF – $103 million additional schools • RINC – recreational infrastructure – over subscribed – provincial and First Nations • National Engineering Assessment
Key Messages • There is a 2% percent cap in funding • 120 communities on DWAs, increasing trend • $1 billion annual shortfall in CFM program • New programs for other capital needs are over subscribed • Priority has been on Water and Wastewater • Assets are deteriorating • First Nation population is increasing at a higher rate – creating demands for infrastructure, schools and housing
Way Forward • Support Economic Development • Comprehensive Community Planning • Energy Projects • Skills Development • Connectivity • SCADA • On-line commence and learning • Alternate capital financing options • P3 - Partnerships with utility companies leading to Capacity building • Alternate forms of financing (Banks, FNFA) • International markets • Resource sharing
QUESTIONS • contact: Irving Leblanc, P.Eng.Acting Director – Housing & InfrastructureAssembly of First Nations613-241-6789 x 386ileblanc@afn.ca