Celebrity renovator urges trade skills in 
Attawapiskat
Holmes on Homes host offers easy fixes for First Nations housing 
crisis
By Janet Davison, CBC News 
Posted: Dec 3, 2011 8:44 AM ET 
Last Updated: Dec 3, 2011 10:22 AM ET 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/12/02/f-first-nations-housing.html 
 
Gabriel Fireman, 69, lives with his four grandchildren and their 
parents. A former band councillor, Fireman says he has been waiting 20 years 
for 
repairs to his home. (Allison Dempster/CBC) 
 
For Canada's most famous — and 
outspoken — home renovator, the solution to the First 
Nations housing crisis is remarkably simple.
"When I heard years ago the problems they were having, to me it was like, 
'Oh, OK, this is easy. Why isn't anyone else doing it?'" Mike Holmes, star of 
HGTV's home renovation show Holmes on Homes, said in an interview.
"We need to stop building crap. It's as simple as that."Steel shipping 
containers are being used to house workers 
at Ontario Power Generation's Lower Mattagami hydro project. The containers 
will 
later be turned into housing for the Moose Cree First Nation. Courtesy Steve 
Marshall 
Holmes teamed 
up with the Assembly of First Nations in 2010 to create a pilot project on 
the Whitefish Lake First Nation west of Sudbury, Ont., to build 
energy-efficient, environmentally friendly homes and other infrastructure. The 
ongoing project also aims to develop trade skills for people living on 
reserves.
While recent 
attention has focused on the grim living conditions on the Attawapiskat 
reserve in northern Ontario, the First Nations housing crisis extends far 
beyond 
just the James Bay community and has gone on for years.
For Holmes and others who want to move past the politicking and 
fingerpointing consuming much of the public debate around the issue, solutions 
lie in the willingness to embrace ideas others may want to dismiss out of 
hand.
Maybe we can make better choices about building materials that may initially 
be more expensive but last longer and won't burn or be susceptible to mould.
Maybe we can consider buildings not based on a wood frame, such as steel 
shipping containers converted into comfortable homes.
And so on.
'This is not hard'
"Let's look at the building technology," says Holmes, whose ideal First 
Nations home would be about 1,100 square feet and built with wood and other 
materials that won't burn or be susceptible to mould.
"I don't care if you want a box. I don't care if you want it off the ground. 
I don't care if you want a foundation. It's using all the products that make 
sense, nothing but mould-free, nothing but zero VOCs [volatile organic 
compounds]. This is not hard."
'The smartest thing we can do is to teach the  First Nations how to do 
it.'—Mike Holmes
Holmes, who is also an adviser on a 90-unit affordable housing project for 
seniors in Edmonton that is a partnership involving the city and the Métis 
Capital Housing Corporation, has no patience for any argument that his ideas 
will cost too much.
Sure, mould-free drywall might cost 50 cents or $1 more per sheet than 
standard drywall, Holmes concedes, but will pay off in the long term, 
especially 
considering the number of homes on First Nations reserves that need renovation 
only a few years after being built. More than 40 per cent of the existing homes 
on reserves need major repairs, compared with seven per cent off reserve, 
according to a government-commissioned 
assessment of First Nations housing.
"Look at the cost of taking it down and doing it again," Holmes said. 
"There's no comparison."
For Holmes, helping First Nations improve their housing stock extends far 
beyond choosing the right wood and drywall or hammering nails.
"The smartest thing we can do is to teach the First Nations how to do it," 
says Holmes. "When they do it themselves, they have pride, and they care, and 
that's what I think is the missing link, not to mention just using the wrong 
products and building foolishly."
Currently, many First Nations are forced to bring in outside contractors to 
build homes because there are not enough local contractors who have the 
necessary certification that federally funded building contracts require. Also, 
much of the construction on reserve is non-profit housing that First Nations 
leaders say is built with less care and attention to building codes and 
standards than more lucrative market housing off reserve.
No quick fixes
No one — least of all Holmes — suggests that the First Nations housing crisis 
can quickly or easily be resolved.
"It's going to take time to spread out and make this right," Holmes said. "As 
long as they continue to just fix, lipstick or mascara, or build the wrong way, 
this is never going to end."The repurposed container homes will have two or 
three 
bedrooms. Courtesy Steve Marshall 
South of Attawapiskat, one First Nation is involved in an alliance that could 
offer hope for its housing problems at the same time as creating jobs and 
boosting work skills for its members.
"For me, obviously, the way housing is done in Canada for First Nations 
doesn't work," said Bobby Cheechoo, a member of the Moose Cree First Nation. "I 
think one of the options that should be considered is turning housing into a 
business."
The Moose Cree First Nation and Morris Modular Space Inc. have allied 
themselves in a project that grew out of the need to house Ontario Power 
Generation workers involved in the Lower Mattagami hydro project north of 
Kapuskasing, Ont.
The project is on Moose Cree territory, and Morris Modular's winning 2009 bid 
to build the workers' accommodation included provisions for turning it into 
First Nations housing once the workers leave. Morris also committed to creating 
a partnership with the Moose Band Development Corporation to build a 
manufacturing facility to refit the workers' housing into permanent homes. The 
facility, which will be in Cochrane, about 120 kilometres southeast of 
Kapuskasing, will also manufacture ArmourWall structural insulated panels that 
are used in building construction, including homes.
Eventually, the facility, which is due to open in early 2012, could create up 
to 25 jobs for First Nation members.
'True and proper solutions'
But what particularly sets the Moose Cree project apart is the form the 
housing takes: dwellings inside converted steel shipping containers.
"Building more wood-based houses that are going to burn down or be filled 
with mould again isn't a good option for anybody," says Steve Marshall, 
vice-president and general manager of the Sudbury-based Morris Group of 
Companies.
"These are true and proper solutions to the crisis. It creates employment. 
It's their own community building their own homes. They profit by it, and the 
homes are far better quality."
The Morris Group has also had discussions about possible similar 
collaborations with the Attawapiskat First Nation and other communities.
Marshall says the only drawback to the idea of using converted shipping 
containers for housing is the stigma associated with it.
"A lot of it is just the mentality of people saying, 'How could you live 
inside a ship container?'" said Marshall. "Well, you're not. You would never 
know."
Marshall says the shipping container really only replaces the shell of a home 
that is traditionally built with wood. The steel frame is highly resistant to 
fire and won't allow mould to develop, and inside, the home is comfortable.
Expert, efficient workers
"They're safe units," Marshall said. "They're thermally efficient. These 
homes have longevity. They don't break down. They don't come apart in the same 
way."
If the full Lower Mattagami camp is converted into First Nations housing, 
within four or five years, it will provide 90 two- to three-bedroom homes. The 
homes will range in size from 900 to 1,300 square feet.
Cheechoo welcomes the alliance with Morris Modular.
"If our vision is realized, for example, we would have our own people 
building these different methods, [and be] expert and efficient at it," he 
says.
But it doesn't necessarily come easily.
"I'm not afraid to say we've encountered challenges with our First Nation in 
trying to change the mindset that exists there … to think outside the box," 
Cheechoo said.
But he sees hope for changing that mindset, particularly among younger 
generations.
"For our generation and the one before, it's tough to think beyond the wood," 
Cheechoo said.
Learning from mistakes
While there is the challenge of thinking outside the box and the potential 
positives that new ideas can bring, there is always an accompanying risk that 
new ideas won't work as envisioned.
"Often, what seems like a good idea from some southern expert runs into 
problems under the conditions of the far north," said Donald Johnston, senior 
director of technology and policy for the Canadian Home Builders' 
Association.
"It takes refinement over the years, and it's really important to build on 
the knowledge of people who have experience in the North, not to make the same 
mistakes over and over again."
Johnston isn't sure how much further ahead use of shipping containers would 
push housing construction in northern areas.
"I often think if we don't see them in less abusive environments in Canada, 
why do we expect unproven technologies to work under adverse conditions? So, I 
take the best of what we've learned and use it on the frontier."
For him, that means wood-frame technology, with low-maintenance materials, 
strong durable finishes and heavy-duty hardware.
Rise to the challenge
At the University of Alberta in Edmonton, one professor spends much of his 
time focused on the engineering around building construction that is done 
off-site in a factory, with the pre-fabricated components moved to the location 
in question for assembly.
Mohamad Al-Hussein has been involved in a range of residential projects 
across North America and has visited First Nations communities around 
Edmonton.
"I ask that people challenge me," said Hussein. "You put the challenges up 
front. The industry — there's quite a bit of knowledge in Canada.
"We don't harness this power of these people. When I work with these 
companies, I tell them: 'Raise the bar. Challenge me, and challenge everybody 
around me. You'll find out there is a solution for any challenge you have.'"
 
Related Links
First  Nations housing in dire need of overhaul 
Shacks  and slop pails: infrastructure crisis on native reserves 
PHOTOS:  Crisis in Attawapiskat 
Special  report: The Big Fix 
Holmes  tackles First Nations housing
External Links
VIDEO:  Attawapiskat housing crisis 
MIKE HOLMES: Make it  right 
UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA VIDEO: Mohamed Al-Hussein 
Federal evaluation of housing on reserves
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of 
external links.)
Full coverage
The Big Fix: Main page 
Canada's  blockbuster infrastructure projects 
You  balance the budget: How would you finance the Big Fix? 
Shacks  and slop pails: infrastructure crisis on native reserves 
Canada  lags in use of road tolls 
Who  will pay for cleaning up Canada's raw sewage? 
CBC  program 
guide
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