February 6, 2004
TV expert seeks active
political role
Kuliktana touted as
next education minister
PATRICIA
D'SOUZA
Donald
Havioyak, the incumbent in the constituency of Kugluktuk, says he will not accept
a seat in cabinet if he's re-elected. (FILE PHOTO)
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During the 1999 territorial
election, Millie Kuliktana of Kugluktuk sat on a panel of bright Nunavummiut
providing commentary and analysis for CBC TV coverage of the vote.
At the time, she harboured
her own dreams of one day standing among those up and coming politicians, and
it was being part of that panel of experts that made her realize that she should
take some action.
"I thought, why am
I waiting until I turn older?"
Now, as she turns 40 (her
birthday is on Feb. 7), Kuliktana has decided the time is right to test her
chances.
"I heard from young
people that I am a voice for the young people," she said in an interview
this week from her home in Kugluktuk.
She's hoping that support
will help her topple the incumbent, Donald Havioyak, in this month's vote.
In 1999, Havioyak won by
just six votes, with 200 to Ida Ayalik-McWilliam's 194. Stanley Anablak took
125 votes, while Kevin Niptanatiak took 50.
Some Kitikmeot residents
are already calling for Kuliktana to be the next minister of education.
As executive director of
Kitikmeot School Operations, she's possibly the most qualified for the job of
any of the 82 candidates across Nunavut.
She began working as a
classroom assistant in Kugluktuk about 20 years ago, eventually becoming an
elementary and then a high school teacher. She has been a program support teacher
and an education consultant, and principal of a school in Igloolik.
She realizes her background
in education makes her a likely candidate for the top job in education, and
said she would welcome the opportunity to serve, that is, if there is no one
more qualified.
"I would be interested
in that [becoming education minister] if there isn't anyone with further skills
than I have," she said.
Havioyak, 53, was chosen
by his fellow MLAs to be a cabinet minister shortly after the last election,
and was assigned the culture, language, elders and youth portfolio by the premier.
But after about a year,
he resigned his cabinet seat to spend more time in his home community.
"I want to inform
you that I am resigning so that I can focus more on the problems that we have
in my community," he said at the time.
And if he is elected this
time around, he said he would not accept a cabinet post, in part because of
the extra time cabinet ministers have to spend in Iqaluit, and also, he said,
because he was unhappy with some cabinet decisions.
"When you're a cabinet
minister, your constituents aren't really hearing what you're doing in the House,"
he said in a telephone interview this week.
"Some issues [cabinet
decisions] I'm not happy with have happened. [As a regular MLA], people would
hear me and I'd get more support."
And as a regular MLA, Havioyak
said he's proud of his accomplishments, including securing facilities for youth
and elders, and an ice project.
He also wants to continue
fighting for support for Inuinnaqtun.
"The Inuinnaqtun language
is very weak in the area. It needs promoting more and more, and more materials.
The Kitikmeot Inuit Association and government should put something together
and make use of our Inuinnaqtun language. The federal government should be doing
the same thing," he said.
As the vice-president of
KIA, Joe Allen Evyaotailak Sr., 50, also sees ways the Inuit organization can
work with government.
The former HTO president,
hamlet councillor, mayor and deputy mayor says he wants to work for the people
of his community.
"I work to try and
help everybody out," he said in an interview this week.
"We're not telling
the young people about education enough, and the parents and leaders are not
communicating with the young people who are not in school. Parents cannot do
it alone. The whole community has to work together," he said.
Evyaotailak said that he
grew up seeing his elders helping others, and quickly learned that that's the
way he wants to live as well.
"That's how I like
to work and that's why I have been successful."
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