December 10, 2004
Ad's wording puts
top job at FCNQ beyond reach of Inuit
Does general manager
for the co-op need a baccalaureate?
JANE
GEORGE
Inuit are being sidestepped
for the top job at the Fédération des coopératives du Nouveau-Québec,
according to Aliva Tulugak, a former president of Nunavik's co-operative network,
and long-time board member on Puvirnituq's co-operative association.
The current job posting
for general manager of the FCNQ says a "baccalaureate in Business Management
is desirable."
The job posting is worded
this way to encourage Nunavimmiut who pursue post-secondary studies, said Yves
Michaud, the acting general manager of the FCNQ.
"It was the executive
of the FCNQ that decided on this," Michaud said. "This item was among
those discussed by the executive. They came to the conclusion that it was important
to include it, to recognize the efforts of Inuit who go to university, even
if it wasn't one of the most important requirements for a general manager.
The job posting also says
"the capacity to write and speak in Inuttitut is essential" and that
"a solid experience might compensate for a lack of diploma."
But Tulugak said qualified
Inuit won't dare apply for the job.
"All my years as a
co-op member and as a board member, I've never seen the word 'baccalaureate'
used," Tulugak said. "It's put on the posting as a smoke screen to
say there's nobody ready as yet."
Tulugak said degrees and
diplomas are not even close to being the most important requirements for the
job of general manager at the FCNQ.
"When Inuit hired
their first general manager it was all based on experience and trust,"
Tulugak said from the FCNQ headquarters in Baie d'Urfé, where he has
been researching a book on the coop movement's history with Peter Murdoch, the
FCNQ's first general manager, who retired several years ago.
"That's the way it
still is up North. We don't have any southern-born store managers in Nunavik,
yet we've managed to survive so far."
Tulugak also said the general
manager should be chosen from among the co-op members from the North and be
someone already involved with the co-op movement.
"We can't work with
people we don't know," Tulugak said.
Tulugak wants to postpone
any consideration of a new FCNQ general manager until after March when the FCNQ
holds its annual general meeting, a request Michaud said has not been formally
made yet to the FCNQ management or executive.
Tulugak said the future
of the FCNQ will be at risk if the selection of a new general manager isn't
postponed because the Puvirnituq co-op would consider breaking away from the
FCNQ, which was established in 1967.
"That would be the
worst and the last option but it's always a possibility that if the Inuit lose
control of the federation, it will be up to the directors of the Puvirnituq
co-op to have a referendum with its members," Tulugak said. "We were
able to exist on our own long before the federation started: we know we can
exist without the federation."
This isn't the first time
Puvirnituq's co-op has threatened such an action. More than two years ago, its
board of directors wrote a letter to the FCNQ, asking for more Inuit employment
at the FCNQ as well as the relocation of some of the FCNQ's various departments
to Nunavik.
"FCNQ should have
more Inuit people who can get involved in decision-making, so that others will
not make mistakes for us," the letter said.
Puvirnituq's co-operative
is one of Nunavik's oldest associations and the largest, running a huge store
and a new hotel, as well as fuel supply operations in the community.
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