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NexGen Energy partners with Indigenous communities to build a hotel in La Loche
Summary
NexGen Energy announced a partnership with the Clearwater River Dene Nation and Métis Nation‑Saskatchewan Local 39 to develop a 59‑room hotel in La Loche, which the communities are set to own and operate and which the company says will create 36 local full‑time roles.
Content
NexGen Energy has announced a partnership with the Clearwater River Dene Nation (CRDN) and Métis Nation‑Saskatchewan (MN‑S) Local 39 to develop a 59‑room hotel in La Loche, Saskatchewan. The company describes the hotel as part of a broader effort to support regional needs arising from the planned Rook I Project and other local demand. The arrangement is structured so the two Indigenous partners will be full owners and operators once the hotel is in service, and NexGen is providing financial backing while appointing a builder. The partners have applied for federal grant funding to support local infrastructure associated with the development.
Key details:
- The planned facility will have 59 rooms and include a conference centre, restaurant, cultural heritage centre and a playground.
- The article reports the hotel is expected to create 36 local full‑time roles.
- The Clearwater River Dene Nation and MN‑S Local 39 are to be full owners and operators when the hotel opens, with operation targeted for July 2027 according to the announcement.
- NexGen is financially backstopping the project and has appointed 3Twenty Modular as the hotel builder.
- The company links the hotel to regional growth tied to its Rook I Project and notes that, on final federal approval, it expects the Rook I Project to support a larger number of direct jobs in the region.
Summary:
The announcement presents the hotel as community‑owned infrastructure intended to increase local accommodation and employment and to support regional activity related to the Rook I Project. The partners have applied for federal grant funding and NexGen has named a modular builder; the company projects community operation by mid‑2027 while regulatory milestones for the Rook I Project remain part of the broader timeline.
