100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Makerspace Tuktoyaktuk receives federal funding

Makerspace Tuktoyaktuk has received $83,000 in federal funding to expand its workshop.

The Tuktoyaktuk Community Corporation, who runs the project, will use the money to add 3-D printers, sublimation equipment that will be available for longer hours to accommodate more people.

People will be able to produce products to sell online or to tourists.

“Communities know best what kind of projects would have the greatest impact for their residents and local economies as they respond to the unique challenges presented by COVID-19,” Michael McLeod, Member of Parliament for Northwest Territories.

“That’s why it’s great to see this makerspace supported in Tuktoyaktuk, which will provide residents with greater creative opportunities.”

The workshop can provide a welcome relief for residents from the isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kendyce Cockney, the Project Manager of the Tuktoyaktuk Community Corporation, said in a statement.

“Public spaces are the glue to our communities: they enable a feeling of belonging and of social cohesion. They are a big part of what makes communities safe, vibrant and connected,” he said.

The federal government is also looking at funding the program beyond June 2022.

“Many of these important programs have limited life span,” he added.

Bailey Moreton
Bailey Moreton
Bailey is new to the north, arriving from Ottawa where he studied journalism at Carleton University. He has worked for newspapers in Halifax, Windsor, and Ottawa. He came to the north hoping to see polar bears. He will settle for a bison. If you have a tip, send it to 905 252-9781, or [email protected].

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Snowking rising on Yellowknife Bay in Art Deco style with hot lineup of acts

Snowkings announce a much anticipated XXXI Festival schedule of events and performer lineup to take place within the walls of an Art Deco-themed winter castle. Edition 31 of the Snowking festival is coming to life, rising from the snow and ice of Yellowknife Bay. “This year will be jam-packed with talented performers and day-time and evening events all within the impressive Art Deco themed architecture of this year’s Snowcastle,” said Taylor Shephard, aka ‘Sir Slush’

Series of “mock testing” using virtual tech to take place at Inuvik hospital

“We're expanding to have audio scopes and stethoscopes and we're looking at other tools that can be used. So that the virtual care out of Stanton or Inuvik can be provided into our smallest of communities. So a physician has always been available in those locations, via phone or travelling to them. But now we're offering a broader base. Connectivity has been resolved in part by using what's there, investing in new technology - so satellite connectivity,” said Dan Florizone

North braces for public service impact, where ‘small’ cuts run “deep”

"The impact on Northern and remote and Indigenous communities where we already know sometimes there is one position in the community, there is only a skeleton crew providing services can be felt definitely by Northerners who depend on certain services that are crucial to them," warns Josée-Anne Spirito, regional vice president at the Public Service Alliance of Canada.

Imperial Oil to end Norman Wells operations by summer 2026

Imperial Oil Ltd. will end production at its Norman Wells facility in the Northwest Territories in summer 2026.

Will LWBs guidelines bring awareness about water laws and compensation?

Gwich’in, Mackenzie Valley, Sahtu, and Wek’èezhìı Land and Water Boards – collectively, the LWBs have released a set of guidelines to raise awareness about the existence of water laws and the claims compensation process in the N.W.T. Despite the N.W.T. 's long history of mining, there have been few applications and leaders at the organization say a lack of awareness of the laws and lack of accessibility to the legal language of the water acts is part of the reason why.