June 10, 2005
Curley fears interference
on subsidies
"The minister wanted
it in his hands so he could approve"
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Rankin
Inlet North MLA Tagak Curley said the process of approving subsidies for community
and business projects was more transparent in the hands of regional groups.
(PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
|
Rankin Inlet North MLA
Tagak Curley warns that $1 million in territorial business subsidies are exposed
to political interference by a cabinet minister, now that the government of
Nunavut has cut ties with a regional group that used to hand out money on their
behalf.
The GN's department of
economic development and transportation took back two business subsidy programs
from the Kivalliq Partners in Development late last month.
GN officials say they ended
their contract with the Inuit economic development group, partly because the
region's mayors were complaining government money was being distributed "inconsistently."
Curley claims the accusations
aren't true, and in fact, the mayors were out of line in protesting against
Kivalliq Partners.
"The projects that
were not approved did not qualify under the program," Curley said in a
recent interview from his office in Rankin Inlet. "That's all there is
to it. They did not meet the guidelines. But it was easier to blame the regional
group."
Curley wants the government
to hand program administration back to Kivalliq Partners, to ensure the process
is open to community scrutiny.
"It's going to be
the minister now, who signs off on the applications," Curley said. "There's
going to be more political interference now. The minister wanted it in his hands
so he can go ahead and approve, whether they qualify or not."
Government representatives
say Curley's accusations are unfounded.
"I'm not concerned
about that [political interference] at all," said David Simailak, who until
last week was the GN's minister for economic development. "There are very
strict guidelines and criteria that have been set up for the administration
of those two programs.
"Those criteria will
be followed."
The Community Initiatives
Program (CIP) and Contributions to Business Development Program (CBDP) will
bring more than $1 million in subsidies to business, training and infrastructure
projects in the Kivalliq region, this fiscal year.
For years, Kivalliq Partners
acted as the conduit between the GN and its clients in the region.
A board of eight members
sifted through business applications and were expected to choose successful
projects based on the program's guidelines.
The board was made of seven
members recommended by seven communities in the region, and approved by the
Kivalliq Inuit Association. They met with a GN representative, who had a veto
over the board's decisions.
Simailak said the department
took over administration of the two programs in order to be consistent across
Nunavut. The programs have always been administered by the GN for the Kitikmeot
and Baffin regions.
A committee of deputy ministers
recently drafted a new policy to make all business programs more efficient in
Nunavut. The committee involved the departments of justice, executive and inter-governmental
affairs, and economic development and transportation.
The so-called "Removing
Barriers to Business" initiative is expected to make it easier to apply
for money from the government, or set up a business in Nunavut.
"We want the business
community in Nunavut to grow," Simailak said. "And we want to be there
as a department to do whatever we can to help it grow."
Simailak said the department
would complete their program review "as soon as possible."
TOP
|