March 1, 2002
KSB move may take seven years to finish
Provincial government slow to pay for school boards relocation to Nunavik
JANE
GEORGE
The Kativik School Board
wont be vacating its head office in Montreal for a new home in Nunavik
anytime soon.
According to the KSB, the
long-awaited relocation to Nunavik "may take longer than planned."
The most recent forecast from the school board is that it will require at least
seven years to complete.
School board officials
feel sorely let down by Quebecs education department.
In 1998, Pauline Marois,
then Quebecs minister of education, assured Nunaviks leaders that
she was committed to moving Nunaviks school board to northern Quebec.
Then, two years ago, François
Legault, who succeeded Marois as education minister, sent a letter to the KSB
in which he reconfirmed his governments support for the boards relocation
plan. Legault acknowledged the move was "important to the population."
And he also promised to
ask Quebecs Treasury Board for money by March 31, 2000, so construction
could start up sometime in 2000-1.
But Quebec was unwilling
to approve the request for the entire $45 million needed to move the school
board north.
It did allot $6.2 million
for the first phase of the school boards relocation, which led to the
construction of 11 duplexes in Kuujjuaq in 2001, presumably to house employees
transferred from the South.
Paul Rémillard,
who oversees native affairs for Quebecs education department, said the
KSB will have to find the money needed for relocation through the education
departments annual capital budget.
This budget amounts to
a total of $17 million a year for the Cree school board, the Lower North Shores
school board and the KSB, and generally pays for school renovations or expansions.
Rémillard said the
best way to engineer new offices for the KSB in Nunavik may be to buy them "piece
by piece." He suggested the KSBs new offices in Kuujjuaq and Kuujjuaraapik
could be built in a prefab modules, which could be expanded every year.
"This would permit
us to stay within our budget," Rémillard said.
Meanwhile, KSB plans to
lobby the Parti Québécois government, so it keeps its former education
ministers promises to move the school board north.
"The KSB doesnt
accept the education departments decision," said KSB spokesperson
Debbie Astroff. "The MEQ [le ministère de léducation
du Québec] is going back on its commitment."
Astroff said the KSB still
plans to keep moving personnel and services to Kuujjuaq and Kuujjuaraapik as
planned, by using existing housing and renting space for offices.
"The school board
is not giving up," Astroff said.
Astroff said school board
commissioners would discuss their next step when they meet again in March.
Rémillard said hes
aware the KSB wants to move more quickly, but he said the school board has to
be realistic. He favours the cheaper, slower pace for relocation.
"Its not good
to change the entire structure in one fell swoop," Rémillard said.
However, under the proposed
Nunavik regional government, the present structure of the KSB would change dramatically.
The school board would be dissolved and be replaced by an education department.
Rémillard denied
this scenario played any role in Quebecs reluctance to fund a move for
the KSB.
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