January 16, 2004
Candidates offer choice
of business, social activism
Baker Lake contenders
say community issues must be addressed
PATRICIA
D'SOUZA
David
Simailak: a cornerstone of Kivalliq's business community. (FILE PHOTO)
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Two candidates vying for
Baker Lake's seat in the legislative assembly will pit big business against
social activism in the race to replace outgoing MLA Glenn McLean.
Kivalliq businessman David
Simailak has an edge with the powerful lobbying efforts of several privately
owned Inuit development corporations behind him, as well as the support of McLean
himself.
But Becky Kudloo, a Baker
Lake hamlet councillor with a strong background in social activism, could shake
things up with her commitment to programs to fight violence against women and
the social ills that are bound to follow mining development in the region.
Kudloo has served 10 years
with the status of women council, the final year as interim president, and 12
years with a treatment centre in the community, which she describes as the only
centre in Nunavut to provide treatment to both victims of family violence and
offenders.
"There's business,
and I think there should also be a social aspect to a community. That needs
to be worked on," she said this week in an interview.
Simailak agrees that social
issues need to be addressed in the community. Baker Lake needs a new child care
centre, a drop-in centre for youth, and a way to persuade young people to pursue
higher education, he said.
He is also the volunteer
chair of the Baker Lake Hospice Society, a 24-hour care facility for elders.
"I want to continue
working with them. I want to see them get more facilities," he said.
Simailak is also a cornerstone
of the business community in the Kivalliq region, serving as the president of
the Qamini'tuaq Development Corp., Piruqsaijiit Ltd. and Tapiriit Ltd., a triple
threat in government lease-back contracts.
The firms have been his
primary line of work since he helped to create them in 1987. Piruqsaijiit, based
in Rankin Inlet, provides management and administrative support to the two other
companies. In 2002, it introduced an ultimately unsuccessful scheme to open
a private mammogram clinic in Rankin Inlet.
Tapiriit, owned by a number
of other corporations, seeks out possible joint ventures. It owns 49 per cent
of the Navigator Inn in Iqaluit, among other businesses.
Qamini'tuaq Development
Corp. is mainly into real estate and owns several buildings containing office
space and apartments, which it leases to the GN and housing associations.
McLean said Simailak's
business background is what makes him such a strong candidate.
"One of the main reasons
I think I would support him is he has a real good business background. And you
know what I've been like for the past five years, trying to be the voice of
the business community in Nunavut. It never really went anywhere," McLean
said.
"I think it's time
... in Nunavut, you know, decentralization is basically over so now it's time
for the private sector to be given some recognition."
But he admitted that Simailak
could expose himself to conflict of interest concerns unless he adheres strictly
to Nunavut's Integrity Act.
"I'm hoping that with
our new conflict of interest guidelines that he will do the right thing, and
I've cautioned him about that," McLean said.
"And I've told him,
as a businessman, you're looked at differently in Nunavut and you've got to
be very careful how you operate. If he does succeed, I'm hoping he'll take care
of business."
However, Kudloo, who is
on leave from her job as a development officer for district education authorities,
with Kivalliq School Operations, said people need to be taken care of too.
Mining, in particular,
is a segment of big business that could have detrimental effects on the community.
"I think it will be
beneficial in terms of employment opportunities. Also, I know everything is
not going to be positive. So we have to start planning toward programs that
can help," she said.
"Where there's a mine
and more people are making more money, then there's more alcohol and drugs available.
Usually it's the women and children who suffer for that, so I know there will
be an increased demand for that type of service."
In addition, she said Nunavummiut
can't repeat a particularly embarrassing statistic from the 1999 election -
only one woman elected.
"Women can put a different
aspect to decision-making because they're nurturers of their families. I think
we have to have a holistic approach to Nunavut."
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