Years in the making, massive plan to guide land and water use in Nunavut rejected

Boats make their way through the Frobisher Bay inlet in Iqaluit on Friday, Aug. 2, 2019. A massive plan to formally guide where, how and when land and water can be used in Canada's easternmost territory has been rejected by the federal and Nunavut governments, as well as a group representing Inuit in the territory. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

IQALUIT - A massive plan to formally guide where, how and when land and water can be used in Canada's easternmost territory has been rejected by the federal and Nunavut governments, as well as a group representing Inuit in the territory.

The Nunavut land-use plan went through four drafts since 2007 and, during that time, the Nunavut Planning Commission held hundreds of meetings, technical workshops, hearings and interviews across the territory's 25 communities and in northern Manitoba.

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