Brendan Bell

Brendan Bell was first elected to the 14th Legislative Assembly on December 6th, 1999. Born on August 17th, 1971 Brendan has lived in the NWT since 1980. He now lives in Yellowknife with his wife Jill and their daughter Emily.

Prior to his election to the Legislative Assembly, Mr. Bell was a business owner and also worked for a management-consulting firm in Yellowknife for several years. Brendan has Bachelor of Commerce and Masters in Business Administration degrees.

In the 14th Assembly Brendan was appointed Chair of Standing Committee on Social Programs, Chair of Standing Committee on Rules and Procedures, and Chair of Special Committee on Conflict Process. He also served as a member of both the Standing Committee on Accountability and Oversight and the Special Committee on the Review of the Official Languages Act.

Brendan Bell
Yellowknife South

Statements in Debates

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, yesterday police and emergency personnel responded to a serious situation in Yellowknife. After many hours of emergency action, police were able to diffuse a standoff in a local residence and apprehend a young man before he could commit harm to others or to himself.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank the RCMP emergency response team, personnel from the city municipal enforcement division, public safety department, the fire and ambulance department, Yellowknife Health and Social Services, Joint Task Force North, the local school boards, the...

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I thank the Member for his support of this program. It has been instrumental in helping us get this up and running in the Sahtu. Yes, there is programming available and we do work with the inmates to makes sure there is a plan upon their release to help them be reintegrated into their communities. We use the community justice groups locally to help us achieve this as well. So there is both programming in the institutions and upon release for the inmates and we think this corrections on-the-land camp model helps us deliver much of that program as well. Thank you, Mr...

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. We have piloted a wilderness camp initiative in the Sahtu. It was very successful the last time around. We are preparing to do it again this year. In the Tlicho region we have also been working with the MLA in the region to talk about a model that would work there. I think we have discovered that exactly the same model can’t be transferred. We have to look at a slightly different approach, but we are talking to the region about that. So we are looking forward to the pilot again being rolled out in the Sahtu and we will have an evaluation after that’s done, but I think...

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I agree with the Minister on this point.

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, I would agree and it is troubling, obviously, that aboriginal people are overrepresented in our institutions. We have been working well with on-the-land programming. We continue to make efforts in our institutions. Members in committee will be aware that we have some what we believed to be culturally relevant programming at the institution. We made some change and improvements. We now have elders from many regions coming to the institution to work with inmates from those regions to talk about what went wrong, how they can make improvements, how they can...

Debates of , (day 10)

Mr. Speaker, thank you. They all get visits from RCMP members from the larger communities and the regional centres, but there are 13 communities that currently do not have detachments. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I don’t have that information. What we do is go through our facilities and see who would be eligible. First of all, we have to make sure the person is not a risk to the camp operators or to the general public before they are eligible to go out on the land, because it doesn’t have the same type of security that we have our facilities. Next, Mr. Speaker, they have to want to participate. I am sure that our staff and the facilities are going through measuring the people there based on those two criteria, but I can certainly provide the Member with more information when...

Debates of , (day 10)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, yesterday police and emergency personnel responded to a serious situation in Yellowknife. After many hours of emergency action, police were able to diffuse a standoff in a local residence and apprehend a young man before he could commit harm to others or to himself.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank the RCMP emergency response team, personnel from the city municipal enforcement division, public safety department, the fire and ambulance department, Yellowknife Health and Social Services, Joint Task Force North, the local school boards, the...

Debates of , (day 10)

I agree with the Member.

---Applause

A promotion. I agree with the Member, Mr. Speaker. I share his concern. It is of highest priority that we are able to establish some detachments in our smallest communities. There are communities that are very remote. It's difficult to provide and ensure safety. We know that there are weather concerns. So, yes, Mr. Speaker, it's a priority. We will continue to make sure the federal government understands that. Thank you.

Debates of , (day 9)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I would also like to recognize my constituent, Gayla Wick. Thank you.

---Applause