May 10, 2002
Pond Inlet SAO honoured
by peers
Rhoda Katsak wins award
for contributions to hamlet
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Nunatsiaq News
OTTAWA Nunavuts
municipal leaders honoured Rhoda Katsak last week for her contribution to the
Hamlet of Pond Inlet.
They named Katsak, who
has worked as the senior administrative officer in Pond Inlet for two years,
the SAO of the year.
During an award banquet
in Ottawa May 2, mayors and other senior administrative officers from Nunavuts
25 hamlets applauded Katsak for her integrity, honesty and efficiency in administering
the day-to-day workings of Pond Inlet.
Katsak, along with the
territorys mayors and SAOs, was in Ottawa for the Nunavut Association
of Municipalities annual meeting last week.
Each year the Nunavut Association
of Municipal Administrators, an organization made up of the territorys
senior administrative officers, awards an SAO for his or her contribution to
the hamlet.
The award is named after
James Eetoolook, the first vice-president of Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. who began
his political career working for the settlement of Taloyoak.
Through his work, Eetoolook
helped bring Taloyoak from a settlement council to a hamlet. The award honours
senior administrative officers who are strongly committed to their hamlet council
and the community.
Elwood Johnson, president
of the Nunavut Association of Municipal Administers, told delegates attending
the award banquet that Katsak deserved the honour for successfully running Pond
Inlets hamlet.
Katsak is known among SAOs
and mayors as a strong lobbyist. "Im not afraid to speak out on behalf
of the communities," she said in an interview after accepting the award.
"I like making the government understand what the local people want."
Despite her no-holds-barred
attitude, Katsak was strangely quiet when her name was announced. She walked
to the front of the crowd to accept the plaque, but refused calls from other
SAOs to give an acceptance speech.
"When they gave me
that award they called me a loud-mouth," she explained. "But I was
so surprised. I think it was the first time in my life that I was speechless,"
she said, letting out a laugh.
Katsak, who grew up in
Igloolik and moved to Pond Inlet in 1972, has a long history with the hamlets
administration. She started as the receptionist in 1990, worked her way up to
assistant administrator of finance, and was later hired as the SAO.
In that position, Katsak
often finds herself talking with Nunavut government officials about Pond Inlets
lack of money for basic infrastructure and programs. Last year, she sat on a
finance committee that was reviewing the way the Nunavut government funds hamlet
projects and programs.
"I talk with all the
people working with the deputy ministers and convince them of what the council
wants," she said.
"The municipalities
arent getting enough funding resources and when the government hasnt
changed their funding ways for 10 years, its difficult."
But Katsak has a passion
for working with numbers and is always looking for other sources of money. "I
love the financial stuff. I like finding that 10¢ that no one else finds."
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