August 8, 2003
Rankin sleeps while
Baker square-dances
Communities celebrate
job news
PATRICIA
D'SOUZA
PPD
employees Eddie Adams, Tommy Adams, Archie Stewart and Gabriel Karlik gather
to learn their jobs will stay in Rankin Inlet. (PHOTOS BY PATRICIA D'SOUZA)
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BAKER LAKE - The 13 employees
of the petroleum products division of the department of public works slept well
this week, after learning last Thursday that their jobs will stay in Rankin
Inlet.
The jobs were scheduled
for transfer to Baker Lake, to centralize in one community the two arms of the
Government of Nunavut's new Qulliq Energy Corp.
Baker Lake is home base
for the Nunavut Power Corp., the energy-generation arm of QEC. PPD is being
reorganized to become the fuel-procurement division of the new corporation.
But PPD employees fought
the move to Baker Lake, saying the department, which was decentralized to Rankin
Inlet before the creation of Nunavut, was one of the success stories of decentralization.
Eleven of the employees
are Inuit. Ten are homeowners. All are highly trained.
Lorne
Kusugak, mayor of Rankin Inlet, said his one-on-one meetings with Premier Paul
Okalik helped his community achieve its victory.
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"We'll all sleep better
tonight knowing we have Rankin to call home," said Archie Stewart, the
department's contracts manager.
Premier Paul Okalik made
the announcement in Rankin Inlet last week, before travelling to Baker Lake
to tell community leaders there that instead of the Rankin jobs, 15 jobs from
the Nunavut Power Corp. in Iqaluit will be coming their way.
Several of the Iqaluit
positions are currently vacant, and could eventually be filled by Baker Lake
Inuit residents.
However, GN officials did
not know whether NPC employees whose jobs were being transferred would move
to Baker Lake or seek other jobs within the government.
"There's always more
jobs available in Iqaluit," said Manitok Thompson, MLA for Rankin Inlet
South-Whale Cove. "If you lose a job in Iqaluit, there are always more
options available to you."
Glenn
McLean, MLA for Baker Lake, invited community residents to a square dance held
in Okalik's honour to celebrate the new jobs.
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Ray Mercer, president of
the Kivalliq Chamber of Commerce, said losing 13 jobs to Baker Lake would have
hurt Rankin Inlet and the entire Kivalliq region economically. Similarly, with
the addition of 15 jobs in Baker Lake, the entire region will benefit.
"It's not 13 jobs,
it's 13 families. Even though it looks like status quo [for Rankin Inlet], we've
gained a lot by not having these jobs moved out," he said.
"Of course, anywhere
in the Kivalliq region where there's growth, other communities benefit from
that. If Baker Lake has got 15 new jobs, Rankin Inlet will get some spin-offs
and the other communities will get some spin-offs."
The news came just in time,
said Joe Niego, mayor of Baker Lake.
"People were starting
to ask me, 'When are these jobs you said were coming?' Finally, this day has
come."
While Rankin Inlet residents
slept soundly, Baker Lake residents celebrated throughout the night with a square
dance held in Okalik's honour.
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