logo
Yellowknife's Giant Mine: Canada downplayed arsenic exposure as an Indigenous community was poisoned

Yellowknife's Giant Mine: Canada downplayed arsenic exposure as an Indigenous community was poisoned

Canada News.Net22-07-2025
Share article
Print article
Decades of gold mining at Giant Mine in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, has left a toxic legacy: 237,000 tonnes of arsenic trioxide dust stored in underground chambers.
As a multi-billion government remediation effort to clean up the mine site and secure the underground arsenic ramps up, the Canadian government is promising to deal with the mine's disastrous consequences for local Indigenous communities.
In March, the minister for Crown-Indigenous relations appointed a ministerial special representative, Murray Rankin, to investigate how historic mining affected the treaty rights of the Yellowknives Dene First Nation.
We document this history in our forthcoming book, The Price of Gold: Mining, Pollution, and Resistance in Yellowknife, exposing how colonialism, corporate greed and lax regulation led to widespread air and water pollution, particularly affecting Tatst'ne (Yellowknives Dene) communities.
We also highlight the struggle for pollution controls and public health led by Tatst'ne and their allies, including mine workers.
The story begins when prospectors discovered a rich gold ore body at Giant Mine in the 1930s. While mining started at the nearby Con Mine in the late 1930s, Giant's development was interrupted by the Second World War. Only with new investment and the lifting of wartime labour restrictions in 1948 did Giant Mine start production.
Mining at Giant was a challenge. Much of the gold was locked within arsenopyrite formations, and to get at it, workers needed to crush, then roast the gold ore at very high temperatures.
This burned off the arsenic in the ore before using cyanide treatment to extract gold. One byproduct of this process was thousands of tonnes per day of arsenic trioxide, sent up a smokestack into the local environment.
In addition to being acutely toxic, arsenic trioxide is also linked to lung and skin cancers, though scientific understanding of environmental exposures was inconclusive at the time.
Archival records show that federal public health officials recommended the roaster be shut down until arsenic emissions could be controlled. But the company and federal mining regulators dragged their feet, fearing the economic impact.
The result, in 1951, was the poisoning death of at least one Dene child on Latham Island (now Ndil), near the mine; his family was compensated a paltry $750. Many Dene in Ndil relied on snow melt for drinking water, and there were reports of widespread sickness in the community. Local animals, including dairy cattle and sled dogs, also became sick and died.
Only after this tragedy did the federal government force the company to implement pollution controls. The control system was not terribly effective at first, though as it improved, arsenic emissions dropped dramatically from nearly 12,000 pounds per day to around 115 pounds per day in 1959. Thousands of tonnes of arsenic captured through this process was collected and stored in mined-out chambers underground.
Throughout the 1960s, public health officials continually downplayed concerns about arsenic exposure in Yellowknife, whether via drinking water or on local vegetables.
By the 1970s, however, latent public health concerns over arsenic exposure in Yellowknife became a major national media story. It began with a CBC Radio As it Happens episode in 1975 that unearthed an unreleased government report documenting widespread, chronic arsenic exposure in the city. Facing accusations of a cover-up, the federal government dismissed health concerns even as it set up a local study group to investigate them.
Suspicious of government studies and disregard for local health risks, Indigenous communities and workers took matters into their own hands. A remarkable alliance emerged between the Indian Brotherhood of the Northwest Territories and the United Steelworkers of America (the union representing Giant Mine workers) to undertake their own investigations.
They conducted hair samplings of Dene children and mine workers - the population most exposed to arsenic in the community - and submitted them for laboratory analysis.
The resulting report accused the federal government of suppressing health information and suggested children and workers were being poisoned. The controversy made national headlines yet again, prompting an independent inquiry by the Canadian Public Health Association.
The association's 1978 report somewhat quelled public concern. But environmental and public health advocates in Yellowknife continued their fight for pollution reduction through the 1980s.
As Giant Mine entered the turbulent final decade of its life, including a violent lockout in 1992, public concern mounted over the growing environmental liabilities. Most urgently, people living in and near Yellowknife began to realize that enough arsenic trioxide had been stored underground over the years to poison every human on the planet four times over.
Without constant pumping of groundwater out of the mine, the highly soluble arsenic could seep into local waterways, including Yellowknife Bay. When the company that owned the mine, Royal Oak Mines, went bankrupt in 1999, it left no clear plan for the remediation of this toxic material, and very little money to deal with it.
The federal government assumed primary responsibility for the abandoned mine and, in the quarter century since, developed plans to clean up the site and stabilize the arsenic underground by freezing it - an approach that will cost more than $4 billion.
Public concern and activism by Yellowknives Dene First Nation and other Yellowknifers prompted a highly contested environmental assessment and the creation of an independent oversight body, the Giant Mine Oversight Board in 2015. Under the current remediation strategy, the toxic waste at Giant Mine will require perpetual care, imposing a financial and environmental burden on future generations.
The long history of historical injustice resulting from mineral development and pollution around Yellowknife remains unaddressed. In support of calls for an apology and compensation, the Yellowknives Dene First Nation recently published reports that include oral testimony and other evidence of impacts on their health and land in their traditional territory.
Hopefully, the Canadian government's appointment of the special representative means the colonial legacy of the mine will finally be addressed. Giant Mine serves as a warning about the current push from governments and industry to ram through development projects without environmental assessments or Indigenous consultations.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Addressing fear, hesitancy in the Mennonite community amid Alberta's measles outbreak
Addressing fear, hesitancy in the Mennonite community amid Alberta's measles outbreak

Global News

time9 hours ago

  • Global News

Addressing fear, hesitancy in the Mennonite community amid Alberta's measles outbreak

Quelling the spread of measles involves immunization campaigns and public health protocols, but Tina Meggison says it also requires sitting down and having an open and honest conversation. That's what she's working to do within the Low German-speaking Mennonite community in Alberta. Meggison has more than a decade of professional — and a lifetime of personal — experience under her belt. Her team of community health representatives with Primary Care Alberta has seen a 25 per cent increase in demand for their services, which include accompanying patients to doctor's appointments and interpreting and answering questions in Low German, since the onset of an outbreak in March. That's about 350 calls per month on average, compared to 285 before the contagious disease spread to 1,656 people in the province. 1:57 More measles cases in Alberta than U.S. Meggison said the rise of people reaching out to the provincial health agency shows an interest to engage in the health-care system, which historically has not always been the case. Story continues below advertisement The next step is taking that outstretched hand and placing knowledge into it. 'We can invite our families to start thinking from a different lens, or see things through a different lens, and maybe start to answer those questions.' Measles in Alberta Health-care hesitancy is rooted in fear for many Low German-speaking Mennonites. Meggison would know. She remembers a public health nurse rolling into her Mexican hometown of Durango on horse-and-buggy with a cooler of vaccines. The nurse told Meggison's mother to line up her 12 children in the yard, asked for their ages, and immunized them, without explanation. 'She didn't know what had been given to her kids. She didn't have the language skills to ask the questions,' Meggison said about her mother, whose primary language was Low German. Her family moved from Durango to Ontario when she was four years old, returned to Mexico more than a decade later, and then to Alberta in 2001. She started accompanying her mother to medical appointments and interpreting for her at 16 years old. 'Unbeknownst to me at that time, I was training for this work,' Meggison said, speaking from Lethbridge, near the Canadian Rocky Mountains. When she started this line of work in an official capacity, she estimates the Low German Mennonite population in Alberta was 15,000. Story continues below advertisement That's since grown to approximately 25,000 to 30,000, based on her organization's last tally. But she says given the transient nature of the population, it's likely an underestimate. 1:59 Learning about Low German Mennonites Many came from Mexico to work the land in Canada. They migrated to Ontario and Manitoba, and from there some made their way to Alberta. Get weekly health news Receive the latest medical news and health information delivered to you every Sunday. Sign up for weekly health newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The government had offered religious and educational autonomy in exchange for agricultural labour in the 1870s. But that freedom never materialized, leading some to mistrust and question the government's authority, said Margarita Penner, a newcomer and Low German Mennonite family liaison with Barons-Eureka-Warner Family and Community Support Services based in Taber. Penner said Mennonites settled all over Alberta – from La Crete in the north to 40 Mile County in the south, on the border of Montana. Story continues below advertisement Community health representatives dedicated to the Low German-speaking Mennonite community are currently only based in southern Alberta, with two full-timers based in Taber; Meggison in Lethbridge; and a roster of casuals. The demand has been so high that they boosted their availability from five to seven days a week. And now, Primary Care Alberta is hiring two more in the south, a third in the central health zone, and a fourth in the north. Southern Alberta has 945 measles cases while the north zone has 534, and central has 108. There, 68 per cent of kids had one dose and 56 per cent had two doses of the measles vaccine by age two in 2024, according to the province's figures for southern Alberta. Local breakdowns for the age group show 40 per cent two-dose measles vaccine coverage in Lethbridge, 29 per cent in Taber, and 71 per cent in Medicine Hat. Dr. Joan Robinson, a pediatric infectious diseases physician in Edmonton, said the rest of the province is not much better off. Alberta has an average immunization of 80 per cent with one dose, and 68 per cent with two doses for two-year-olds. Robinson says Alberta's low vaccination rates are due to myriad of factors, including a broader mistrust in the health-care system and a public shift towards misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic. She says people began getting information on immunizations on social media, rather than from medical experts, and began believing that vaccines are harmful. Story continues below advertisement She also says it would be helpful if the Alberta government debunked this belief. Though Edmonton and Calgary have lower case counts than the rest of the province, she points to particular areas within the urban cities that are not much better. 'The highest immunization rate in the whole province is barely over 80 per cent in Provost. It means that every community that measles is introduced into, there's a reasonable chance of more cases,' Robinson said. 'In order to prevent measles, we really do need community immunization rates as high as 95 per cent.' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "In order to prevent measles, we really do need community immunization rates as high as 95 per cent." Run and hide Meggison said health education starts with identifying misinformation that heightens deeply entrenched fear. She holds focus groups for Low German communities that open the door to seemingly simple, yet controversy-riddled topics, such as, what is measles? What are its long-term consequences? What is in the vaccine that prevents it? 'If you don't know what it is you're preventing … then what is the motivation to prevent it?' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "If you don't know what it is you're preventing … then what is the motivation to prevent it?" This is all done in Low German because many members of the community don't fluently speak or understand English, and don't read or write, making it challenging to access credible information, Meggison said. Story continues below advertisement She shows them places they can source accurate facts, such as a YouTube channel where she hosts videos in Low German on health topics, with some gaining more than 1,000 views. Proudly, she recalls seeing a lightbulb go off for one woman who described an epiphany in one of her recent groups. 'She said, 'I can make decisions for my family, and it doesn't have to be public knowledge. I can make these decisions and not share it with my family members if they ask and I can just say that's my business,'' Meggison said, and described other women nodded in response to this passionate declaration, which strays far from their community's everybody-knows-everything way of life. 'You could see that there was a sense of freedom that came out of that group.' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "You could see that there was a sense of freedom that came out of that group." Her hope is that conversation will spread within the tight-knit community. 1:47 Saskatoon Mennonite church takes renewable energy approach Needle is neutral Alberta's health-care system has translation services, but the challenge is Low German is not common outside of the community. It holds shared cultural significance, which makes interpretation hard to come by and word choice paramount. Story continues below advertisement Nely Penner, a community health representative in Taber, said the word 'vaccine' was an obvious roadblock to upping measles immunization in southern Alberta. 'When I think of the word vaccine in German, I just think of the history of immunization in Mexico,' Penner, who grew up in a Low German community in Mexico's northern Chihuahua region, said. Though Penner never personally experienced 'vaccine nurses' like Meggison did, similar stories were passed down from her parents and grandparents. 'People didn't understand what they were getting. It was fear-based. People would run and hide to not get these vaccines.' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "People didn't understand what they were getting. It was fear-based. People would run and hide to not get these vaccines." To mitigate the negative connotation, she suggested Alberta health providers use the word needle instead. 'Needle is just more neutral,' Penner said. Little changes like this can have a big impact in facilitating a health space that feels safer, acknowledges and validates feelings of mistrust, Penner said. 'When you're getting information, especially sensitive information, you want to be able to trust that person. And so that's such a huge part of what we do.'

Merit expands skin-care offering with first facial cleanser
Merit expands skin-care offering with first facial cleanser

Vancouver Sun

time9 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Merit expands skin-care offering with first facial cleanser

The news: Merit launches first face cleanser. What you should know: Merit has expanded its Great Skin collection with its first facial cleanser. Dubbed the Great Skin Double Cleanse, the bi-phase formula features a liquid-to-foam texture. 'Great Skin Double Cleanse is a prime example of the Merit philosophy on skin care — that skin care can be work, but having Great Skin doesn't have to be,' says Aila Morin, chief marketing officer (and Canadian) at Merit. 'It's a multi-tasking formula that combines the power of a makeup remover and a cleanser to remove makeup and SPF, with the added benefit of gentle exfoliation, to leave skin feeling soft and smooth. It takes what is normally a two-step process and simplifies it, without sacrificing on efficacy or results.' Discover the best of B.C.'s recipes, restaurants and wine. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of West Coast Table will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Summarizing the new product as 'two-in-one, effective and comfortable,' Morin notes the product addition has been a longtime coming for the It-girl beauty brand. 'Cleanser is a product that often gets overlooked, but we feel it's the most important step to set you up for great skin, so it's always been on our road map,' she notes. 'When we launched our first skin-care product, Great Skin Serum, in 2021, double cleansing was the norm in skin care. As a brand built on simplifying routines, that multi-step process didn't feel true to us — so we took our time to develop a formula that actually made cleansing easier.' The bi-phase product features ingredients such as oat-derived surfactants, gluconolactone (a polyhydroxy acid), plant humectants, and a lightweight emollient to gently cleanse, exfoliate and soothe skin. With products like the brand's fan-favourite Minimalist Perfecting Complexion Stick (so good!), Flush Balm blush and awesome beauty bundles already among many beauty fans' favourites, we won't be surprised to see this new cleanser finding fast fans. The price: $44. The retailer: .

Pendopharm® signs an exclusive distribution agreement with Neuraxpharm for PrBuccolam® in Canada and announces its approval by Health Canada Français
Pendopharm® signs an exclusive distribution agreement with Neuraxpharm for PrBuccolam® in Canada and announces its approval by Health Canada Français

Cision Canada

time12 hours ago

  • Cision Canada

Pendopharm® signs an exclusive distribution agreement with Neuraxpharm for PrBuccolam® in Canada and announces its approval by Health Canada Français

MONTREAL, Aug. 4, 2025 /CNW/ - Pendopharm, a division of Pharmascience Inc., is pleased to announce that it has entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with Neuraxpharm Group (Neuraxpharm), a leading European specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) disorders, headquartered in Düsseldorf, Germany. Under the terms of the agreement, Pendopharm ® will be responsible for the commercialization of Buccolam ® (Midazolam Hydrochloride Oromucosal Solution) in Canada. Buccolam ® is indicated for the treatment of prolonged, acute, convulsive seizures in children. Pendopharm ® is pleased to announce that Health Canada has approved Buccolam ®. About Epilepsy Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder characterized by recurrent seizures of various types and severity. These seizures result from abnormal electrical activity in the brain and can be triggered by a range of factors, including structural abnormalities, brain inflammation, physical injury, trauma, infection, or unknown causes. It is estimated that the underlying cause of epilepsy remains undetermined in up to 50% of patients diagnosed with epilepsy. 1 Nearly 1 out of 100 Canadians live with epilepsy, and approximately 13% of them are children and youth. 1 Despite treatment with anti-seizure medications, some patients may experience prolonged acute convulsive seizures which require immediate intervention. Early treatment of acute seizures is critical to prevent escalation and improve patient outcomes. 2,3 Benzodiazepines, are considered first-line therapy for managing prolonged seizures. 4 Buccolam ® is an oromucosal solution of midazolam (a benzodiazepine) supplied in a ready-to-use, pre-filled syringes for buccal (absorbed in the mouth) administration. 5 "Prolonged convulsive seizures in pediatric patients can have significant short- and long-term impacts", said Dr. Aris Hadjinicolaou, Pediatric Neurologist at CHU Sainte-Justine. "Having access to a ready-to-use, on-label medication could facilitate timely intervention during seizures and may decrease the need for emergency medical services". " This partnership represents Pendopharm's commitment to bringing medicines that address unmet medical needs to Canadian patients," said Jad Isber, Vice President & General Manager of Pendopharm ®. "We look forward to working with Canadian neurologists and pediatricians to make Buccolam available to all patients who may benefit from it." Dr. Maximilian von Wülfing, Chief Operating Officer of Neuraxpharm, said: "Through its network of strategic partnerships around the world, Neuraxpharm is committed to expanding access to market-leading medicines. Our collaboration with Pendopharm further strengthens our position as a global CNS specialist enabling us to deliver an epilepsy treatment designed to reduce hospitalizations and provide support to patients and their caregivers." About Pendopharm ® Pendopharm, specialty division of Pharmascience Inc., is a leading Canadian specialty pharmaceutical company providing patients with innovative medicines that address unmet medical needs. Its areas of focus are gastroenterology, sports medicine & orthopedics, neurology and cardiology. Pendopharm ® has extensive experience and knowledge to successfully manage its growing product portfolio. For more information, please visit For media inquiries, please contact [email protected]. © 2025 Pendopharm, division of Pharmascience Inc. All rights reserved. About Pharmascience Inc. Pharmascience Inc. is one of the largest pharmaceutical manufacturers in Canada and is headquartered in Montreal, Canada. Pharmascience delivers high-quality medicines to over 50 countries worldwide. Pharmascience Inc.'s global presence and agile business development model provide healthcare communities around the world with the high-quality Canadian medicines to respond to patients' needs. About the Neuraxpharm Group Neuraxpharm is a leading European specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the treatment of the central nervous system (CNS), including both psychiatric and neurological disorders. It has a unique understanding of the CNS market built over 40 years. Neuraxpharm is constantly innovating, with new products and solutions to address unmet patient needs and is expanding its portfolio through its pipeline, partnerships and acquisitions. The company has c.1,000 employees and develops and commercialises CNS products through a direct presence in more than 20 countries in Europe, two in Latin America, one in the Middle East, one in Australia, and globally via partners in more than 50 countries. Neuraxpharm is backed by funds advised by Permira. Neuraxpharm manufactures many of its pharmaceutical products at Neuraxpharm Pharmaceuticals (formerly Laboratorios Lesvi) in Spain. For more information, please visit .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store