August 2, 2002
KRG fires meeting coordinator
on eve of ICC conference
Flare-up one month before
assembly "the straw that broke the camels back," Kuujjuaq mayor
says
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
One of the organizers of
the Inuit Circumpolar Conference 2002 General Assembly is considering legal
action against the Kativik Regional Government after she was fired just one
month before the event.
At 5 p.m. on July 10, Susan
Ruston received a hand-delivered termination notice signed by Michael Gordon,
the mayor of Kuujjuaq, and Johnny Adams, chairman of the KRG.
"Regrettably, we have
to inform you that we have no choice but to terminate, as of today, your employment
contract with the Kativik Regional Government as Co-Coordinator of the Inuit
Circumpolar Conference event," the letter says.
"The main reason is
your behaviour today in front of international officials and your overall behaviour
leading to todays incident."
Ruston says she was dismissed
"without notice," on a particularly bad day. "I admit I was irritable
that day, but I didnt expect to get fired," she said in a telephone
interview from her home in Kuujjuaq. "I was having problems. I forgot to
take my medication."
According to a doctors
note on Ungava Tulattavik Health Centre stationery, provided to Nunatsiaq News
by Ruston, she had been under a doctors care for "severe depression"
since March 2001.
"In the last week
she tried to stop her medication on her own, what could explain part of her
mood changes," the doctors note says.
In a letter to Gordon,
Adams and three other KRG officials on July 15, Ruston recounts the events that
led to her termination.
"On June 13, 2002,
I was in a meeting in the KRG conference room with international supervisors
for Customs Canada. The other co-coordinator walked into the meeting and started
arguing with me that the Inuttitut text on the logo was wrong. .... Before I
could even introduce [the Customs Canada representatives], he walked out leaving
me embarrassed and my visitors uncomfortable," the letter says.
In a letter to Gordon and
Adams on July 10, she explains what set her off the day she was fired. "This
incident that you refer to was in fact the co-coordinator pushing
papers in front of me insisting that I take them when I informed him twice that
I already had them. I had better things to do than argue over papers, so I went
back to my office."
"Getting to the critical
time"
"Shes a good
worker on a lot of points, but in person-to-person, her skills are not as good,"
Gordon said in a phone interview. "Its something thats been
building up. Through the whole winter it was noticed, but it was getting to
the critical time."
Although he was not present
for the July 10 incident, Gordon said it occurred in front of two ICC coordinators
from Greenland and another from Ottawa. "[Ruston] pushed paperwork, shouted
and left without saying a word. The two from Greenland, the coordinator from
Ottawa, couldnt figure out why this was the case," Gordon said.
Sandy Tooma, the co-coordinator
with Ruston on the project, refused to comment.
"I guess you could
say its the straw that broke the camels back. We cant have
these things happen with everything getting to a critical stage," Gordon
said. "Something had to be done. We couldnt let this go on."
Gordon acknowledged that
Ruston had received no previous warnings about her behaviour. "I dont
think it would have changed her attitude. I guess she needed some support from
her doctor," he said.
"She couldnt
hack it. I dont know what. She just exploded. It was uncalled for. In
this position, you have to be very personable and accommodating as well. We
cant just stop everything for one persons ranting and raving,"
he said. "Its a very critical job and we cant let her hold
ICC hostage."
Gordon said he and Adams
acted according to KRG policy. Adams was not available for comment. "She
was not wronged by us," Gordon said.
Jean-François Arteau,
assistant director general for the KRG, said the organization was left with
no alternative but to let Ruston go. "It was such an extraordinary incident
that happened that day that we had no choice," he said.
Ruston was given one weeks
pay in lieu of notice, but the KRG was not legally required to give her even
that much, Arteau said. "She was with us for seven months, so we could
have let her go [with no severance pay]. It was just to be correct and fair
that we let her go with one weeks pay."
Ruston, a single mother,
is left to care for her three children with no income. "It doesnt
help that Im the only one supporting us," she said.
Though she has worked in
accounting, and in finance and administration in the past, Ruston doubts she
will be able to find another job [in Kuujjuaq]. "Theyve ruined my
life. Ive never been fired in my life. Whos going to hire me now?"
She has asked for a legal
opinion and is waiting for a response.
"Apparently three
people are doing my job now," she said.
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