July 11, 2003
The boys are back
in town
Umiavut drops its anchor
in Koojessee Inlet
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
NEAS
cargo loader Lawrence Audlarock of Kuujjuarapik will make between $35,000 and
$40,000 during the five-month sealift season. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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The orange tug hauling
barges lined with sealift containers this week means summer has arrived in Iqaluit.
Each time the barge is cleared of the containers, the tugs heads back to the
Umiavut - Our Boat - anchored in Koojessee Inlet for another load.
For Inuit crew members
like Lawrence Audlarock of Kuujjuarapik, the five-month sealift season means
fast cash for hard work. He puts in eight-hour shifts. Among his many responsibilities,
his job is ensuring the cargo-filled cans make it safely from ship to shore.
When the sealift season
is over in November, Audlarock, who works for Nunavut Eastern Arctic Shipping
Inc. (NEAS), will have made $35,000 to $40,000. But there is a price to pay.
"It's very
good money but I miss my home, my wife and my kids," says the soft-spoken
family man who works as a corrections officer and bouncer the rest of the year.
NEAS organizes two-week
training programs for Inuit in Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia. Audlarock is one
of six people from Nunavut and Nunavik who graduated from the program funded
by Makivik Corp. and Qikiqtaaluk Corp. As the number of applicants grows, so
too will the number of trained Inuit.
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Bobby Angutigirk
of Salluit is one of two Inuit on the 21-man crew.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN
MURPHY)
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Suzanne Paquin, vice-president
of NEAS, says attracting qualified applicants is half the battle.
"It's a work in progress.
We think it's a very good program. If they work hard and if they last the five-month
season, they can make good money," Paquin says from her office in Montreal.
Language has been a slight
problem on board the 120-foot Umiavut. Audlarock speaks Cree and the
only other Inuit crew member, also from Nunavik, speaks Inuktitut. The rest
of the crew speak French.
What the 21-man crew shares,
regardless of mother tongue, is a love for physical work and big pay cheques.
What the people of Nunavut and Nunavik love is the arrival of anything new.
Christmas in July
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After
unloading in Iqaluit, the Umiavut goes to Kimmirut, Cape Dorset and around Nunavik.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN
MURPHY)
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Over the next four months,
Nunavummiut will restock their sealift rooms with canned food, laundry soap
and toilet paper. Construction sites like Pangnirtung's new movie theatre will
buzz with the arrival of lumber and saws.
In Iqaluit, an influx of
shiny new vehicles indicates a ship has come and gone.
The Driving Force car dealership
will receive 30 new cars and trucks this year. The order is significantly lower
than 2001 when the company ordered a slue of new Suzuki vehicles for the 2002
Arctic Winter Games.
But it isn't all about
receiving. It's also about community spirit, says Art Stewart, Cape Dorset's
senior administrative officer.
"It's a real beehive
of activity," Stewart says. "No matter when the ship comes in, the
guys will work all night unloading if they have to and there are always kids
on the beach watching."
Shipping goods into Arctic
communities between July and October is a long-standing tradition - one that
underwent significant changes this year.
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Cargo is transported
from ship to shore at high tide. (PHOTO
BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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In March, the Government
of Nunavut's department of public works awarded its multi-million-dollar dry-cargo
sealift contract for the Baffin and Kivalliq regions to two Inuit-owned companies:
NEAS and Nunavut Sealink and Supply.
Previously, the contract
had gone to Nunavut Ocean Transport (NOT), a company affiliated with the Montreal-based
Crosbie Shipping and the Northwest Territories' Northern Transportation Company
Ltd.. With NOT out of the picture, it's unlikely the picturesque Lady Franklin
will be in Iqaluit this year.
From 1959 to 2000, the
Canadian Coast Guard handled sealift shipping. In 2000, the department of public
works took over to provide more streamlined service by Inuit-owned companies.
So far, so good, says John
Fast, the department's transportation coordinator.
"What we want is for
people to get more bang for their buck," Fast said of the switch from federal
to territorial management.
All Nunavut communities
receive at least one shipment. Larger communities like Iqaluit receive up to
five shipments.
After leaving Iqaluit,
the Umiavut goes to Kimmirut, Cape Dorset and Northern Quebec.
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