May 7, 2004
New Nunavut economic forum born this week
Nearly 40 organizations
form new coalition
JIM BELL
Members of Nunavut's political and bureaucratic elite gathered in Iqaluit this
week to create a new body called the "Nunavut Economic Forum," whose
aim is to implement the economic development strategy that Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc. and the Government of Nunavut released last year.
"I have high hopes for it and I hope it manages itself well and that it
gives us new initiatives for the economic issues that we want to deal with in
Nunavut," said Paul Kaludjak, the president of NTI.
NTI, along with the GN, is a major player in the development of the economic
forum.
It's built on an earlier body called the "Sivummut Economic Development
Strategy Group," also known by the acronym "SEDS." The Sivummut
group did the work that led to Nunavut's first economic strategy, set out in
an 80-page document released in September of 2003.
The same coalition of nearly 40 organizations representing Inuit organizations,
chambers of commerce, the Nunavut Association of Municipalities, industry associations,
labour, and government form the backbone of the Nunavut Economic Forum.
At their gathering this week in Iqaluit's Frobisher Inn, they agreed to organize
themselves as a society and chose 10 directors. Eight are "voting"
directors, while the remaining two, who represent the federal government, will
sit on the board but aren't allowed to vote.
The economic forum's board met behind closed doors this past Tuesday afternoon
to elect officers.
Monica Ell will serve as president, George Bohlender will serve as vice-president,
Doug Workman will serve as secretary, and Tania Scott will serve as treasurer.
"We all want to make Nunavut the next economic powerhouse in Canada,"
Ell said in a news release issued this week.
Kaludjak said at one of the economic forum's biggest priorities will be to
press for a Canada-Nunavut economic development agreement, or "EDA."
"We need to get that, and I'm sure that's going to be a priority for them,"
Kaludjak said.
In December of 2002, the Sivummut group gave the federal government a proposal
for a $66-million, five-year EDA. The money would be spent on priority areas
outlined in last year's economic strategy document.
The economic forum's aims also include research, the sharing of information
among members, coordinating economic development activities, increasing the
participation of Inuit in Nunavut's economy, and increasing the participation
of communities in Nunavut's economy.
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