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Inuvik pool reopening delayed again, now set for comeback in January
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As restrictions lift, facilities and restaurants in Inuvik begin to ease back to normal
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We re still on high alert says Aklavik mayor as water levels continue to waver
Amid rising water levels, Aklavik Mayor Andrew Charlie says many roads are still drivable, and spirits remain high.
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CBC News ·
Posted: May 31, 2021 5:46 PM CT | Last Updated: June 1
Water started to cover what Allen Kogiak described as the hamlet s back road. (Submitted by Allen Kogiak)
The hamlet of Aklavik, N.W.T., is still on high alert as water levels continue to waver, says Mayor Andrew Charlie on Monday. Water levels are still kind of high, Charlie said. It s dropped for a bit and then it comes up a bit, drops again.
Inuvik residents will have to wait until summer for the pool to reopen
Engineers want to make the ground below the pool has settled from the leaking issues that plagued it recently. The move is expected to cause an additional delay of about two months before the pool reopens.
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CBC News ·
Posted: Feb 02, 2021 7:00 AM CT | Last Updated: February 2
Inuvik s senior administrative officer Grant Hood says engineers want to take measurements of the ground below the pool to make it has settled before they replace the pool s in-ground plumbing.(Mackenzie Scott/CBC)
Fun at the pool at Inuvik s Midnight Sun Complex is going to have to wait a couple of months longer than originally planned.
Posted: Dec 14, 2020 5:00 AM CT | Last Updated: December 14, 2020
Bernice Lavoie owns three stores in Inuvik where masks are mandatory.(Mackenzie Scott/CBC) comments
More communities in the Northwest Territories are instituting mandatory mask policies as COVID-19 cases continue to climb across Canada.
The local government in Fort Simpson recently passed a resolution requiring masks in stores. Around the same time, Fort Smith made masks mandatory in municipal buildings. Last Monday, similar policies went into effect in Inuvik and Hay River. Most decisions that have been made have been about safety. So putting in a mask policy in our own facilities is just another way to make sure that we can keep our residents safe here in Inuvik, said Inuvik Mayor Natasha Kulikowski.
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