February 6, 2004
Kilabuk campaigns
on restraint, realism
Cabinet veteran warns
that government money will be "very tight"
JANE
GEORGE
Peter
Kilabuk is seeking re-election in Pangnirtung on a campaign based on what he
calls "honest, factual information." (FILE PHOTO)
|
Peter Kilabuk was finally
ready to start some serious campaigning for re-election this week in Pangnirtung
- something he'd put on hold shortly after the Nunavut election period was announced
last month.
"I started handing
out my pamphlets and posters, but an elder passed away, and because of the first
death, I put my campaign on hold, and then the avalanche tragedy came. It's
only today that things have settled down enough for me to be able to campaign
again," Kilabuk said in an interview from his home in Pangnirtung.
As MLA, Kilabuk also served
as a member of cabinet and was, at different times, minister of sustainable
development; education; culture, language, elders and youth; and community government.
Kilabuk is banking on his
experience to help his re-election effort. His pamphlet bears the message "Let's
continue what we've started. There is no need to go back to Square One. Together
we can make it happen."
"When they open it,
they are able to see my priority areas which I want to focus on ... the right
hand side has some of my more obvious accomplishments that I either initiated
or supported during my term," Kilabuk said.
Restraint is the key to
Kilabuk's priorities for the future.
That's because Kilabuk
feels he has a clear and realistic idea of what can be done.
If re-elected, Kilabuk
said he would be committed to continuing support for social programs, particularly
for youth and elders, but he's already warning voters that "the next four
years of the government will be with very tight finances."
"My campaign stems
strictly from honest, factual information. I'm not making any promises. I can
only work hard to try and help my constituents," he said.
Even so, Kilabuk said he
will work on making sure the air strip moves from its present location in the
centre of the community.
"It would free up
a lot of good land. We have no more room for buildings and also it would reduce
a lot of safety concerns. It would help the major airline bring in more new
and modern aircraft," he said.
The favoured site for a
new airstrip is on the hill overlooking town - and Kilabuk said he's lobbying
Ottawa to cover the relocation costs.
"There's a better
chance than there ever was," he said. "It definitely requires federal
money because it would cost too much."
The planned construction
of a new health centre will free up the old nursing station, which Kilabuk sees
down the road as a potential home for the community's social groups.
Kilabuk will also seek
an extension of the existing breakwaters for fishing boats, more housing and
renovation programs, more money and business for the community's fishing and
crafts industries, as well as more training and assistance for the disabled.
Since 1999, Kilabuk said
he's been able to bring several improvements that benefit his constituents -
a youth centre, a trail for hunters, a new fire hall, a new school bus, a new
water and sewage treatment plant, more municipal vehicles, a portable preschool
and an ice resurfacer for the hockey rink.
Kilabuk said a lot of money
wasn't needed to carry off all these improvements.
"It has been the realigning
of existing infrastructure and programs and putting them together," Kilabuk
said.
However, Pangnirtung, population
1,500, is not one of Nunavut's "have-not" communities. In addition
to enviable scenery and rich natural resources, which sustain tourism and a
local fishing industry, Pangnirtung also has 72 decentralized territorial government
jobs.
"We've been very fortunate
with the decentralized jobs. Most have been local hires," Kilabuk said.
The GN jobs also meant
52 new staff housing units. By the end of this year, Pangnirtung will have also
received 11 social housing units, both duplexes and single dwellings.
These all make for a solid
platform, but Kilabuk said he's not taking his re-election for granted.
"I have to take this
as the underdog, to keep myself reminded that I shouldn't overlook anything
here. It's too important of a position, so I'm taking it [the campaign] to heart,"
he said.
However, Kilabuk's tenure
as MLA hasn't all been rosy. He suffered through the education department's
failure to win support for Nunavut's new education act and was then shuffled
into a new department. Along with tough territorial portfolios, Kilabuk also
had difficult family losses to deal with.
But Kilabuk said his learning
curve is over.
"Because of the many
twists and turns, the ups and downs, it was not until the third year that I
was comfortable enough to give concrete information to my constituents about
what I had learned," he said. "It is a very difficult job, but one
I dearly loved."
Kilabuk said many constituents
say they want him back as MLA and hope to see him return to cabinet, too. Others
suggest he should seek the premiership.
But Kilabuk doesn't want
to discuss that option before the results of Feb. 16 are in.
"As everybody knows,
the Number One priority is to get elected," Kilabuk.
In this election, Kilabuk
faces Simeonee Keenainak, who ran unsuccessfully against Kilabuk in the 1999
territorial election.
Keenainak is a noted accordion
player, longtime RCMP constable and teacher. He also served as co-captain of
1998's successful bowhead whale hunt.
Keenainak was hunting this
week, and not available for an interview.
However, in the last campaign,
Keenainak told the Nunatsiaq News being a policeman and teacher has given him
insight into the cultural shock affecting Inuit in Nunavut.
"During the 20-some
years I was with the RCMP, our culture was changing a lot. A lot of good things
came in, a lot of sad things and a lot of questions," he said.
Keenainak said his chief
concern was how the Nunavut government would handle Inuit culture. He said he
wanted the Nunavut government to draw on elders' wisdom when drafting laws and
policies. Leaders should look at the strengths of traditional child-rearing
practices to tackle such problems as suicide.
"I used to read the
suicide notes kids left behind and all of them said 'no one loves me anymore,'"
he said. "I talk to the elders a lot. I say, 'why do we raise our children
like a glass? Why do they break?"
"Culture should be
put on the table. It's our last chance. If we don't put traditional knowledge
into Nunavut, we're going to lose it."
TOP
|