June 3, 2005
Nunavut land use body mired in chaos
Chair refuses to call meetings, finance officer under suspension
JIM BELL
Enmeshed in a bitter dispute with board members who want to review his job
description and salary, Bob Lyall, chair of the Nunavut Planning Commission,
refuses to call board meetings until DIAND minister Andy Scott helps him deal
with rebellious board members.
In a letter to Scott dated May 10, Lyall complains about NPC board members
who are challenging his authority. He accuses them of violating certain procedural
rules, and asks DIAND to give him "direction" on what to do.
"In these circumstances, it is my best judgement as chair to suspend the
balance of our Board meetings and to seek further direction from you as minister
to resolve a situation which suggests to me certain members of this board are
acting without authority," Lyall says in his letter.
Lyall also suggests that the DIAND minister should give direction on whether
it's "appropriate" for Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. and the government of
Nunavut to be consulted on the matter.
The letter is contained in a package of documents leaked to Nunatsiaq News
this week.
On Feb. 23, NPC's board passed a resolution setting up an ad hoc committee
to review Lyall's job description and salary, and the commission's bylaws. The
members of that committee are Peter Kritaqliluk, Meeka Kilabuk and Suzie Napayok.
But that committee has yet to make a report to the full board on their work,
and now that Lyall has suspended board meetings, it's not clear when or if that
will happen.
Speaking on a condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal, one board member
alleged that the ad hoc committee may have been blocked in attempts to get information
from staff that they need to do their work - especially financial information.
Another board member, also speaking on a condition of anonymity, suggested
that a majority of planning commission members may now be opposed to Lyall's
actions.
Five board members who come from Baffin and Kivallliq represent one side of
the dispute, the source suggested. On the other side are Lyall, two board members
from the Kitikmeot, and the NPC's executive director, Luke Coady.
If this is true, it suggests that Lyall may have lost the support of a majority
of board members.
For his part, Lyall says in a May 16 letter to all board members that the planning
commission was to meet May 10 in Yellowknife with members of the Nunavut Water
Board and the Nunavut Impact Review Board, and with the help of former DIAND
minister Bob Nault, to talk about ways of working more closely together.
Lyall alleges in his letter that some board members "chose not to attend"
the morning meeting, and met on their own without his authority.
Then, at 6 p.m., the commission was to have started a regular board meeting,
Lyall said. On the agenda for that meeting, the ad hoc committee was to have
made a report.
By 6 p.m. that day, Lyall had already decided to suspend the commission's board
meetings. He says in his May 16 letter that he went to the original "meeting"
already armed with his letter to Scott, and a decision to suspend the meeting.
But five days before that, on May 5, members of the commission say they presented
Lyall with a new agenda, and a request to hold a separate commission board meeting
on May 10, 11 and 12 at a different location, starting at 9 p.m. May 10. Several
members attended that meeting, but not Lyall.
In a May 18 letter to Lyall, the board's secretary-treasurer, Suzie Napayok,
said neither she nor the planning commission's vice-chair, Peter Kritaqliluk,
approved of the meeting with the NWB and NIRB, because of a lack of prior notice.
The ad hoc committee has not yet had a chance to present any report on its
review of Lyall's salary and job description - because no full board meetings
have been held since the committee was struck in February.
At around the same time, Luke Coady, the commission's executive director, issued
a suspension with pay to Carol Sarazin, the commission's finance officer.
The Nunavut Planning Commission, one of the more obscure creations of the Nunavut
land claims agreement, is part of Nunavut's family of public shared management
boards.
It's a public, not an Inuit organization, and is funded by the federal government.
With about 12 employees based in Ottawa, Yellowknife and Cambridge Bay, its
job is to produce land use plans for Nunavut's various regions.
Its members are appointed by the minister of DIAND, some from lists of names
submitted by Inuit organizations and the Nunavut government.
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