February 6, 2004
O'Brien campaigns
on construction boom
"Our community
has done much better with me as Speaker"
JANE
GEORGE
Kevin
O'Brien, the incumbent MLA in Arviat, is running on his record of bringing construction
projects and new jobs to the community. (FILE PHOTO)
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Kevin O'Brien, the MLA
for Arviat and Nunavut's speaker of the legislative assembly, is sounding cautiously
confident about his re-election bid.
"The response to me
appears to be good. The people who are working on my campaign feel good about
the campaign," O'Brien said in a telephone interview from his campaign
office in Arviat. "It's been quiet in the community. It's been bitterly
cold here since before Christmas. That takes the excitement out of a lot of
people."
O'Brien said many residents
tell him they're proud their MLA became Speaker.
O'Brien has explained to
his constituents that as a Speaker, it doesn't mean he won't deal with their
affairs, but instead he deals directly with the Premier or ministers on issues.
"Our community has
done much better with me as Speaker than when I was a regular member,"
O'Brien said.
Like other MLAs, O'Brien
has been obliged to spend a lot of time away from his riding, in Iqaluit.
"If you want to deliver
the various products and services in your community, that's where the action
is, the capital, that's Iqaluit," O'Brien said.
The big challenge for the
future, he said, will be to keep what the community has achieved over the past
few years and build on it - "not have it siphoned away to some other regional
centre."
"The message I'm hearing
is that they want someone with experience and they don't want to start all over
again because there's too much at stake," O'Brien said.
Among his achievements
as MLA, O'Brien can point to a new $15-million school, the transfer of headquarters
for Nunavut Arctic College and regional education and housing corporation offices
to Arviat, and a new daycare centre.
"With the construction
of the new school, there will be work here for the majority of people over the
next two years," he said.
O'Brien said Arviat is
now in line for its own dentist, doctor and birthing centre.
"The community is
growing so fast - it's 2,200 people now," O'Brien said, up from 1,800 not
long ago due the creation of 80 new decentralized jobs in the community and
the annual birth rate that sees 80 new babies a year in the community. "It's
growing beyond our resources that we have."
O'Brien said his constituents
are concerned about jobs, health care and training.
"These are issues
that we've spoken about for a number of years," O'Brien said. "They
want to see the continuation of the effort to build a road between this community
and Manitoba."
O'Brien said he's confident
more economic opportunities and possibilities for training will open up in the
next few years when mining comes to Baker Lake and Rankin Inlet.
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