December 10, 2004
Nunavut Arctic College
to train Inuit health workers
Programs would help
Nunavut to approach goal of representative workforce
SARA
MINOGUE
Nunavut
Arctic College president Mac Clendenning poses with Cape Dorset's adult educator,
Tirak Parr. (FILE PHOTO)
|
Despite the dual pressures
of budget cuts and a student body that has grown over 50 per cent in the last
three years, Nunavut Arctic College is planning several new programs to meet
the urgent call for more Inuit in government jobs.
College president Mac Clendenning
said he is working closely with Nunavut's Department of Health and Social Services
on three programs that would prepare Nunavummiut for work in the health-care
sector.
Among those is a two-year
mental health care worker program that Clendenning hopes to start at Nunatta
Campus in Iqaluit next September.
Talks are underway to develop
a maternity care worker program at Kivalliq Campus, with an eye towards preparing
staff for the birthing centre in Rankin Inlet.
And a full curriculum has
already been plotted for a program that would train therapy assistants - people
who work as support staff for nurses or other health care professionals.
"We're just looking
at how we can secure funding for that program," Clendenning said.
If those programs go ahead,
they will help the Government of Nunavut with one immediate concern - finding
local health care workers to implement Nunavut's new "Care Closer to Home"
health strategy.
They would also help the
GN get closer to its goal of a representative government workforce, where four
out of five government workers are Inuit.
Article 23 of the Nunavut
Land Claims agreement says that the government should set up training to prepare
Inuit for the workforce.
To help meet that goal,
Nunavut Arctic College is working with a committee of deputy ministers to plan
other programs that could improve the level of employment for Inuit.
The college is also working
closely with the Department of Education on a trades training strategy. College
officials are looking at where a trades training facility could be established,
and what kind of programs they should offer.
These developments come
at a time when Nunavut Arctic College is not in a rosy financial position.
The most recent financial
statements show that the Crown corporation has a deficit of $785,000 at the
end of 2003.
Part of the shortfall may
have been due to management issues. The college ran for two years with no vice-president
of finance after its headquarters were moved to Arviat under the GN's decentralization
plan in 2001.
Another was due to government-wide
budget cuts made last year. Cutbacks in base funding from the government forced
the college to trim about $1 million from its annual operating budget, which
this year, is running at about $22 million.
The legislative assembly
recently approved one-time funding of $1.3 million to allow the college "to
address their current deficit and to assist them in implementing recommended
improvements in management effectiveness and accountability."
Clendenning said he is
"confident" that, by the end of this fiscal year, the college will
have its deficit "pretty much eliminated."
But the college is also
under another strain - more students.
In 2001, there were 817
full-time students enrolled at campuses across Nunavut. In the 2003-04 school
year, there were 1,366. That's more than a 50 per cent increase in enrollment
in three years.
Several programs, such
as management studies in Rankin Inlet, and the arts and crafts and environmental
technology programs in Iqaluit, are now at capacity.
Overall, that's good news.
"I think it's because
students are seeing that they can come to Nunavut Arctic College, they can take
these programs, and they can get a job," Clendenning said.
But base funding from the
GN, which is about $14.5 million this year, has not increased at the same rate.
Instead, the college now produces 50 per cent of its training programs with
the help of funding partners.
For example, the Department
of Justice funds the Akitsiraq law program. The Kakivak Association funds several
programs, including an early childhood education program that recently graduated
about 80 students in seven Baffin communities.
The sheer volume of students
continues to strain the college's infrastructure.
Clendenning said the college
views housing, particularly family housing, as a high priority.
"Enrollment has increased
here in Iqaluit to the point that we can no longer accommodate all of our students
with families," Clendenning said. "Four years ago, we could."
Now, all 26 family units
in the Nunatta residence are full, and the college leases a further 33 private
units, an expensive short-term solution.
To meet rising demand,
a new 20-unit student residence will open up in Cambridge Bay next fall. And
just two weeks ago, the college won approval for a $6 million project that will
see accommodation for 80 students in Iqaluit, with construction starting next
spring.
Rankin Inlet will have
to be next.
The lack of accommodation
means some students in the Kivalliq region have to be turned away, Nanulik MLA
Patterk Netser told the legislative assembly on Nov. 18.
The college is gearing
up for a comprehensive review of all of its infrastructure needs, from community
learning centres to state-of-the-art classrooms to student accommodations.
TOP
|