January 23, 2004
Union boss: trade layoffs for more programs
Okalik says Doug Workman's
plan may threaten government services
GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS
Premier Okalik says that if he's re-elected, education and training would be
a priority for the next government. And he says Doug Workman's scheme for downsizing
government is misinformed. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
|
A union activist running in the Feb. 16 territorial election warns that his
campaign promises would require layoffs if he's elected.
In his faceoff against premier Paul Okalik for Iqaluit West, Doug Workman said
this week that if elected, he would cut the GN civil service to pay for his
list of priorities for the next government.
Workman, who has been president of the Nunavut Employees Union for five years,
said Nunavut's first government failed to put "people first," and
instead created a bureaucracy with deputy ministers who ran their departments
like their "own little basic kingdoms."
"What I've found is it's a servant of itself. It doesn't serve people
effectively," Workman said of the Nunavut government.
"We need to streamline the public service... There's a lot of duplication
of work," Workman said.
Okalik responded by saying that the government can tighten its belt in areas
like human resources, but he rejected Workman's idea as misinformed.
"It's coming from a person who has never worked in government," Okalik
said. "So I think he needs to understand a little better how government
works."
Okalik said if his opponent wants to reduce the size of government, he should
be clear on exactly where the cuts would be made.
Workman said the government could afford to close down four of 11 departments
- more than a third of the current government structure.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Iqaluit West challenger
Doug Workman wants to pay for new programs by reducing the size of the civil
service. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
|
However, Workman refused to name the departments that he thinks are expendable.
On the flipside of his cutback proposal, Workman said government needs to boost
salaries and benefits offered to front-line employees, such as nurses and social
workers, to stem high staff turnover.
He said the extra cash from government cutbacks would also fund new training
programs in Nunavut, to boost the lagging numbers of Inuit in the public service.
Workman cited an immediate need for home-grown mental health workers, as well
as addictions counsellors and teachers.
Workman's push for small government marks a clear break from the big-spending
promises often made by candidates with ties to the labour movement.
At his platform release earlier this week at the Grind & Brew coffee shop,
Workman stressed that he is not a "union candidate," despite his position
on the NEU executive and the support he's receiving from them.
"The union is not running any candidate," he said. "The union
does not have a strategy in place to run candidates at all."
Workman's focus on streamlining government springs from the fiscal challenge
facing whoever wins the Feb. 16 election. Finance Minister Kelvin Ng warned
future MLAs in the last assembly that the GN's spending is growing faster than
its revenues.
Despite the cash crunch, Workman argued the next government should be able
to improve education and housing in Iqaluit.
According to Workman, Nunavut education system needs "a complete overhaul,"
including a review of how to improve Inuktitut services within schools. He said
Inuktitut schooling under the previous government was starting too late to ensure
students learn the language.
Workman's changes to education would also include a junior kindergarten program,
and new support services for special-needs students.
Calling for a housing "boom" in Nunavut's capital, Workman said he
would push government to build more social housing in Iqaluit West, subsidize
housing renovations, and look to reduce the cost of leasing a home.
Workman said he would fulfill these promises as an MLA, and does not want to
be the next premier of the territory.
Before press time, Okalik had yet to formally release his platform. But in
an interview, he highlighted education and training as a priority for the next
government.
For education, Okalik said he wants to keep the government on track with a
goal to have every student in Nunavut speak Inuktitut and French fluently by
the time they graduate.
"We don't want to tinker with it [the goal] unnecessarily... because if
we screw up, we could lose a generation of young people," he said.
In training, Okalik lamented the low level of Inuit participation in the territorial
government - 29 per cent in Iqaluit-based jobs, 43 per cent overall - but said
training, such as Arctic College's law program, was already underway to change
that. He said he hoped to add further training programs, especially in health,
by working with Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. to find funding.
At the constituency level, Okalik focused on business incentives and job creation.
He said he would work to remove regulation and financial obstacles in the city,
including giving the territorial government more control over housing, health
and safety regulations.
Okalik said regulations imposed by health and safety inspectors, as well as
quasi-judicial boards like the Liquor Board, are adding unnecessary expenses
to doing business in Iqaluit.
"These boards or agencies are not elected, they're not accountable to
anybody," he said. "We [the government] have to have some safety regulations,
but we have to get rid of barriers that may exist in those areas."
If re-elected, Okalik wants to change legislation inherited from the Government
of the Northwest Territories that puts territorial inspectors and agencies like
the Liquor Board at arm's length from government.
Okalik said by reducing regulations, the government would be encouraging the
private sector to create more jobs because business expenses would be lower.
To pay for his promises, Okalik said the next Nunavut government can expect
new money from federal aboriginal initiatives, and future corporate taxes from
mining companies in Nunavut.
Although the federal government currently reaps the royalties from mining activity
in the North, Okalik said Prime Minister Paul Martin's ascent in Ottawa suggested
this fundraising power would eventually be handed over to territorial governments.
TOP
|