North

New public housing units in Behchokǫ̀, N.W.T. expected to welcome tenants next month

Three new public housing buildings in Behchoko will become homes for families, singles and elders as early as next month. 

One of the duplexes includes two-bedroom units for seniors from the community

A woman standing before a home smiles on a winter day.
Lucy Kuptana, N.W.T.'s housing minister, stands in front of a duplex in Behchokǫ̀, N.W.T. in February 2025. The units will serve as housing for seniors. (Luke Carroll/CBC)

The long public housing waiting list in Behchokǫ̀, N.W.T. is expected to get a little shorter next month, as multiple units will soon welcome tenants. 

The community has three new buildings, with each designed to accomodate a different group in need of housing. One duplex, which includes two bachelor units, is for single people. Another duplex with two two-bedroom units is for seniors. A third building with two multi-bedroom units will be for families. 

CBC News joined for a tour of the three new buildings.

Monfwi MLA Jane Weyallon Armstrong said she's happy to see the units so close to welcoming tenants, but more are needed.

"Right now, we're in crisis, we need more houses, not just in Behchokǫ̀, but in Whatì, Gamètì and Wekweètì as well," she said. 

A house pictured on a winter day.
A public housing building in Behchokǫ̀ pictured in February 2025. (Luke Carrol/CBC)

The units will go to those at the top of the public housing waiting list, a list that is determined through a point-based system. 

"People who apply, it depends on what situation they are in," said Lillian Erasmus, the housing manager for Behchokǫ̀ Ko Gha K'aodee, the local public housing authority.

She said the community's waiting list, which includes somewhere around 160 to 180 people — or 135 families, according to the N.W.T. housing minister — has been growing in recent years. 

Two woman in a room stare ahead.
Lillian Erasmus, right, housing manager for Behchokǫ̀ Ko Gha K'aodee, and Charlene Erasmus, secretary for Behchokǫ̀ Ko Gha K'aodee. (Luke Carroll/CBC)

"Young adults are getting of age, so they want to move out of their families house," Erasmus said. 

Seniors gave feedback on design

For the seniors' units, Bronwyn Rorke, Housing NWT's manager of capital planning and design, said seniors were engaged to provide feedback that could be incorporated in the design of the building.

"Making sure that the kitchens were large, making sure that there's storage space because seniors kind of struggle to do constant kind of shopping," she said. 

These units were also designed with enough space to accommodate ramps in case the tenant is in need of a wheelchair.

A microwave.
A new public housing unit in Behchokǫ̀, N.W.T. on Feb. 21, 2025. The unit is designed for elders and has the appliances, like the microwave, low down so it is more easily accessible if the tenant is in a wheelchair. (Luke Carroll/CBC)

Territorial Housing Minister Lucy Kuptana says the seniors and the bachelor units were a collaboration between Housing NWT and the Tłı̨chǫ Investment Corporation. 

"Anytime there's development in the region, we reach out and see if there's any opportunities to partner and look at development opportunities within the community," she said. 

Kuptana says she knows the community needs more houses, but that she is happy to see the progress.

She also credited Weyallon Armstrong for her dedication to bring more housing to her constituents.  

"She advocates and she really pushes housing hard," Kuptana said. 

The modular units arrived by road in late July and were assembled throughout the fall. A ribbon cutting ceremony was held on Feb. 21, and both Kuptana and the Erasmus say they expect the units to house tenants in about the next month.

A woman standing before a home on a winter day smiles.
Jane Weyallon Armstrong, MLA for Monfwi, is pictured outside a public housing unit in Behchokǫ̀, N.W.T. in February 2025. Weyallon Armstrong says the units are great, but that her region needs more housing as the situation is a "crisis." (Luke Carroll/CBC)