April 4, 2003
Francophone Association angry MLAs
killed Bill 1
The Iqaluit-based Francophone
Association of Nunavut described the legislative assemblys decision to
kill Bill 1, the proposed education act, "totally unacceptable" in
a news release issued late last week.
"Abandoning Bill 1
means maintaining the status quo: this is totally unacceptable," said Paul
Landry, president of the association.
"Maintaining the status
quo means that we keep living with an Education Act inherited from the NWT.
An act that is unconstitutional. An act that does not meet the expectations
of Nunavummiut."
Last fall, the association
contracted the services of Iqaluit lawyer Paul Crowley and declared its intention
to take the government to court if it didnt bring the bill into compliance
with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
As a result, the Nunavut
government formed a working group made up of representatives from the association,
the French district education authority and the departments of education and
justice.
This past February, the
association and the GN signed a joint submission to the standing committee proposing
a series of amendments to the bill.
"These amendments
represented a major step in the right direction," the news release says.
"While they do not, on their own, ensure that the legislation is up to
the standards set out in the Charter, the AFN was hopeful that the working group
would develop regulations that would ensure that the complete legislative package,
the legislation and the regulations, would meet the constitutional requirements."
The association believes
that only half the work is done, and that the French DEA was premature in calling
the bill unconstitutional in a story published in Nunatsiaq News on March
21.
"We were quite confident,
based on the cooperation that had been cultivated, that a satisfactory legislative
package would have been developed," Landry said. "We will go to court
to defend our rights if we have to but it is never the preferred road."
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