January 18, 2002
Quebec ministers visit Inukjuak as part of poverty mission
Nunavik groups to discuss unemployment and high prices with provincial delegates
JANE
GEORGE
MONTREAL Two Quebec
government ministers were to be in Inukjuak on Thursday, as part of a province-wide
consultation on poverty.
Nicole Léger, minister
for the elimination of poverty, and Jean Rochon, minister of state for labour
and employment, were scheduled to meet with elected officials from nearly every
organization in Nunavik to discuss the rampant poverty and unemployment in the
region.
The unemployment rate and
cost of goods is much higher in Nunavik than it is anywhere else in Quebec.
And the Nunavik officials were going to show the Quebec ministers how much the
essentials of life can cost in Nunavik.
According to a 1995 comparison
of the price of 46 food items, a food basket that would cost $125 in Montreal
costs $180 in Kuujjuaq and $254 in Umiujaq. Overall, the cost of living is substantially
higher in Nunavik up to 70 per cent higher in Salluit and Ivujivik
than in Montreal.
Recent statistics show
that:
The unemployment
rate in Nunavik is more than 16 per cent.
Food and basic retail
items cost between 44 and 100 per cent more than in Montreal, and this difference
is increasing.
Despite higher costs,
the average income in Nunavik is lower than in southern Quebec.
Nunaviks welfare
rates are the highest in the province.
Housing is overcrowded
The per-capita average
employment income is about $5,000 less in Nunavik than in other regions of Quebec.
The Quebec government has
said it wants to hear ideas from throughout the province about what to do about
poverty. The government intends to include disadvantaged groups in its plans
as well particularly those in remote regions. Quebecs motto during
its public consultations on poverty has been "Dont leave anyone out!"
After wrapping up its consultation
tour, Quebec intends to launch what the government calls a "systematic
offensive" against poverty. The province has already tried to fight poverty
by increasing employment incentives and giving tax breaks to low-income workers.
Now, its ready to
spend another $100 million to improve social conditions. Some of that money
is likely to end up in Nunavik.
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