June 11, 2004
Nunavut's incumbent
targets housing, training
Nancy Karetak-Lindell
seeks third term in Ottawa
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Nancy
Karetak-Lindell also wants to stir up more interest in federal politics and
programs in the territory. She said raising interest will force politicians
like her to better serve Nunavummiut. (FILE PHOTO)
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Nancy Karetak-Lindell,
Nunavut's incumbent MP, promises to drum up more federal dollars for housing
and training in Nunavut, if she's re-elected.
Karetak-Lindell, who's
been Nunavut's MP since 1997, carries a trim campaign platform into the election,
on policies specifically related to the territory.
But she says that housing
and training remain the largest challenges for Nunavut, and require the most
immediate attention.
"If someone asked
me what the number-one priority is for Nunavut, I would say housing," Karetak-Lindell
said during a recent stop in Kugluktuk.
Karetak-Lindell, who won
the Liberal nomination for Nunavut by acclamation, didn't have specific answers
for how she would improve housing in the territory. She also declined to explain
how she would improve training opportunities.
But she said she remains
optimistic that she can help create programs that will boost literacy among
an otherwise talented workforce in Nunavut.
Karetak-Lindell added that
a new funding formula set up under the last Liberal government will make it
easier for Nunavut to gain access to funding for housing and other needs.
For years, the federal
government awarded funding on a per-capita basis, which left under-populated
regions like Nunavut with relatively low funding levels.
Karetak-Lindell, a 46-year-old
resident of Arviat, said her connections as a Liberal candidate increase Nunavut's
chances of seeing federal improvements in the territory, such as more housing.
With those contacts in mind, she said she decided to run again for MP because
she still has "more to do with serving the people of Nunavut" after
two terms in office.
Karetak-Lindell, who won
by a landslide in each of the last two elections, said she stands apart from
the other candidates because of her personal approach to politics. As a bilingual
Inuk, she said unilingual Inuit can approach her without worries about communication.
"People come first
for me and that's always been my focus," she said.
If elected, Karetak-Lindell
hopes also to focus her next term on increasing how many Nunavummiut pay attention
to federal politics, and wants to help them get involved in the process of keeping
their MP accountable.
Karetak-Lindell plans to
pique more interest in the federal government by encouraging communities to
start educational programs about how the federal system works. She said more
Nunavummiut can influence federal policies so they better reflect Inuit culture.
"I want people to
take control of their lives," she said. "When people ask me what changes
I would like to see in my work, I've always said, 'getting people to exercise
their rights.' "
Karetak-Lindell's campaign,
backed by several influential business people and politicians in Nunavut, will
take her to most communities in Nunavut.
In 1997, Karetak-Lindell
took 47.2 per cent of the vote in Nunavut, comfortably ahead of her nearest
rival, Hunter Tootoo, who ran for the New Democrats and took 24.6 per cent of
the vote, but by a considerably thinner margin than Jack Anawak, her Liberal
predecessor.
In 2000, she won by an
overwhelming margin, with 68.5 of the vote. Her nearest competitor, Palluq Susan
Enuaraq of the NDP, took just 18.6 per cent.
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