July 2, 2004
ICC at risk of losing
Alaska
This is a huge
political issue.
We need that strength to get on the map.
SARA MINOGUE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Aqqaluk Lynge, president
of ICC Greenland, is a stalwart Greenlandic nationalist who has promoted Inuit
circumpolar unity for many years. Hes worried about the consequences of
Alaskan Inuit losing interest in ICC. (PHOTO BY SARA MINOGUE)
|
The Inuit Circumpolar Conference could lose one of its strongest partners if
things continue to deteriorate at ICC Alaska headquarters in Anchorage.
Its been a year since ICC Alaskas board of directors has held a
meeting with enough members to make any decisions.
Attempts to reschedule board meetings have met with what Michael Pederson,
an executive council member for ICC Alaska, called, an unresponsive effort
on the members parts. Pederson had little activity to report at
an executive council meeting in Nuuk on June 19.
Funding to the organization has been cut in half, and there has been no progress
on the mandate set out by the Kuujjuaq Declaration that was created in 2002.
This is a huge political issue, said ICC Chair Sheila Watt-Cloutier,
hearing the news for the first time. ICC Alaska needs to mobilize the
way we do. Our whole culture is at risk. We have to react, and especially in
the United States. We need that strength to get on the political map.
Alaska is a cornerstone of the ICC, said Aqqaluk Lynge, president
of ICC Greenland and vice-chair of the executive council. The most influential
government is sitting there and dictating to the rest of the world. We need
Alaskan Inuit to be there when we discuss our issues.
Alaska was once a driving force behind the ICC.
Eben Hopson was one of the first Inuit leaders to recognize the power of a
unified circumpolar voice. He played host to the first Inuit Circumpolar Conference
in Barrow on June 13, 1977, when he was mayor of the East Slope Borough.
This year, Pederson was the only Alaskan representative in Nuuk.
ICC Alaska president Chuck Greene was unable to attend the council meeting
in Nuuk because the timing conflicted with a meeting of the Nana Development
Corp. board, of which Greene is the president.
A shortage of time and money are two of the reasons Greene offers for the lacklustre
attitude of his board members.
Most of our board of directors are presidents and CEOs of our native
corporations and non-profit associations, and these native organizations are
very large and very busy, he says. Many board members also sit on
the board of directors for the Alaskan Federation of Natives.
Greene says that, even without a scheduling conflict, ICC Alaska would only
have been able to afford to send one representative to the meeting in Nuuk.
ICC Alaska relies on contributions from member organizations, some with their
own financial challenges. The Bering Straits Native Corporation recently sent
a letter saying they would not be able to contribute at all this year.
But these factors are a reflection of a wider shift in Alaskan politics that
has made the Inuit Circumpolar Conference a limited priority.
[ICC has] accomplished what it needed to accomplish for the Alaskan Inuit,
and I think thats why were playing a lesser role in the affairs
of our Inuit than we once did, Greene says.
I think it has to do with the fact that the native corporations and the
native non-profit organization have reached a point in their efforts where theyve
become quite self-sufficient and theyve become quite self-determined,
Greene says.
Most of their board members are Inuit and tribal members of their respective
communities. Theyre not relying on the forum that Alaska or ICC would
have provided to them to accomplish much of the components of self-determination.
Theyre thriving organizations and thriving corporations and are becoming
powerhouses in state and national politics.
Greene says that the circumpolar Inuit still have important issues to address
together, such as climate change, language, the care of marine mammals and the
environment.
He also says that ICC Alaska has no intention of shutting its doors, adding
that there has been talk of hosting a language conference related to the ICC
in Alaska in 2005.
ICC Alaska is to take over the chairmanship of the ICC in 2006, and Greene
says he is hopeful that our Alaska membership will recognize and realize
that.
But Greene has already told Watt-Cloutier that if ICC Alaska cant find
the support it needs to host the chairmanship, he would recommend that Canada
continue to assume the responsibility until the next general assembly meeting
after 2006.
Greene is considering holding the next council meeting at the same time as
the Alaskan Federation of Natives are getting together, which would make traveling
more convenient for members from across the state who are already traveling
to take part in the AFN.
ICC Alaska recently hired a new executive director to replace Paulette Schuerch,
who resigned in January. Jack Zayon, who has an MBA from the University of Alaska,
is mapping a new funding plan for the organization, and is looking after day-to-day
affairs at headquarters in Anchorage.
I see Alaska ICC becoming a viable, responsive, responsible, accountable
and successful organization in the near future, and were going to be prepared
for the next meeting in 2006, Greene says.
Watt-Cloutier, meanwhile, is planning to contact all board members over the
summer before traveling to Alaska in October. Her goal is to ensure that
the work is extremely relevant to Alaskans, and overcome the funding issues
that she says are endemic to all non-governmental organizations.
TOP
|