January 11, 2002
Housing shortage may leave
many GN positions unfilled
BCC needs 10 correctional
officers, but jobs dont qualify for housing
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
About two-thirds of the
job openings listed by the government of Nunavut are currently not eligible
for staff housing.
As a result, says Doug
Workman, president of the Nunavut Employees Union, a lot of positions are not
being filled.
Ten GN employment ads
one for 10 correctional officers at Baffin Correctional Centre carry
bold lines of type indicating that the positions are ineligible for housing.
According to Ron McCormick,
director of corrections and community justice, the positions were casual jobs
that have been made into full-time jobs. Despite the lack of housing, he says,
"were managing to get people."
In addition to the correctional
officers, BCC is also advertising for an assistant director of corrections,
and the department of justice is looking for several youth officers. The departments
of finance, sustainable development and intergovernmental affairs have also
posted openings. None of these positions offer housing.
But with Nunavuts
tight housing market, job-hunters have little hope of finding a place to live
if they dont have a guarantee of staff housing.
"Housing didnt
seem to be a problem a year or two ago," said Workman. At that time, he
said, the GN was working at less than full capacity. Since then, the government
has grown exponentially and the extra units the GN once had have all been filled.
"They knew full well
before April 99 what the full complement of the workforce would be," Workman
said. "Theyre sending a real mixed message.
The main reason for the
shortage, Workman said, is the GNs goal of a decentralized workforce.
Spreading its employees across Nunavuts 26 communities would reduce the
housing impact on Iqaluit. But there have been serious delays in the decentralization
project and, as a result, many GN jobs destined for other communities have remained
in Iqaluit.
The 1996 selloff of housing
owned by the government of the Northwest Territories didnt help either.
Another reason, said McCormick,
is the GNs commitment to hire more Inuit employees. "Theres
a huge incentive to hire Inuit," he said, adding that a number of Inuit
employees working either full-time or on a casual basis for the department of
corrections an justice have their own housing.
Still, the housing shortage
in Iqaluit and outlying communities is as great for Inuit as it is for job-seekers
from outside Nunavut.
"To think that youd
fill all those jobs from the people here in town is dreaming," Workman
adds. There are many positions that cant currently be filled by Nunavut
residents, such as nurses, doctors and engineers, he said.
The union office receives
about two or three calls a day from people who want to know about the job possibilities
in Nunavut. They want to know the salary and benefits that accompany certain
jobs and, when Workman tells them the job does not come with an offer of housing,
they want to know the cost of living. He tells them whats available on
the private market, and that if theyre lucky, theyll be paying $1,400
for a one-bedroom apartment. And that, undoubtedly, convinces many not to apply.
"I question the Nunavut
governments employment intentions," Workman said. "Its
hard to know whos captaining the boat."
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