PBCN Chief reflects on challenging COVID year
In many ways, Saskatchewan’s northern communities have faced some of the toughest challenges around COVID-19.
And, as he reflects on the full year that has now passed since the pandemic arrived in this province, the chief of one of Canada’s more populous First Nation knows better than most the struggles of having to be quarantined.
“I’m in isolation because of a close contact; it’s my fourth time in isolation but I’m getting used to it,” Chief Peter Beatty of the Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation (PBCN) told paNOW. He said he’s tested negative and hopes he can be free to get out and about again soon.
But his repeated period of solitude in his cabin sums up the challenges that many have faced since the first COVID scare in the North in mid-March 2020, when a health worker returned from international travel into Southend, one of eight PBCN communities. While that small outbreak was quickly contained thanks to the efforts in the community, tougher days lay ahead across the North.