Agnico Eagle sends Nunavut mine workers home to guard against COVID-19 spread | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Agnico Eagle sends Nunavut mine workers home to guard against COVID-19 spread

Gold is poured as at Agnico-Eagle's Meadowbank mine facility in Nunavut on August 24, 2011. Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. says it is sending its local workforce home from its Nunavut mining operations for four weeks to protect them and their communities from spread of the COVID-19 outbreak as the territorial government declares a public health emergency. The Toronto-based gold mining company says it will continue to pay those workers and it is meeting with its contractors to discuss similar measures for their local workforces. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Original Publication Date March 19, 2020 - 10:06 AM

TORONTO - Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. says it's sending its local workforce home from its Nunavut mining operations for four weeks to protect them and their communities from the potential spread of the COVID-19 outbreak as the territorial government declare a public health emergency.

The Toronto-based gold miner says it will continue to pay those workers and it's meeting with its contractors to discuss similar measures for their local workforces.

It says workers who are not currently on site at its Meliadine and Meadowbank operations will be asked to stay home, while the reduced workforce that remains will keep the mines running.

There haven't been any confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Nunavut and the company says that's also true of Agnico Eagle's global operations.

Company spokesman Dale Coffin wrote in an email the Nunavut decision will affect about 450 of the company's 3,000 employees at the two mines, including kitchen and cleaning staff, miners, drivers, tradespeople and administration workers.

In a report, National Bank Financial analyst Mike Parkin said the two mines are expected to produce a little over 30 per cent of Agnico's gold production for the first half of 2020.

"This precautionary measure is being implemented in order to eliminate the potential risk of transmission of COVID-19 from a southern worker to a Nunavut worker, with the risk of it moving into the communities," Agnico Eagle CEO Sean Boyd in a statement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 19, 2020.

Companies in this story: (TSX:AEM)

News from © The Canadian Press, 2020
The Canadian Press

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