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January 3, 2003
Nunavuts year of
maturity
A look back at the year
2002
Abraham Tagalik quits his job as president of Qikiqtaaluk Corp. in January,
after QC awards a contract for the proposed new Baffin Regional Hospital to
Nunavut Construction Corp.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Nunatsiaq News
Nunavummiut may remember
2002 as the year they came face to -face with not only the limits of their new
government but also its possibilities.
During the bad gasoline
fiasco, Nunavut residents saw their government recognize a serious error and
take responsibility for it.
But as they watched
the governments education bill flounder its way through the legislature,
Nunavut residents learned that good intentions alone arent enough to guarantee
success in government.
It was also a year
when Inuit beneficiary organizations took unpredented measures to improve accountabilty
and to repair their tarnished reputations.
The Qikiqtani Inuit
Association rebuilt itself from the ground up and Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. took
firm action to control the wayward Nunavut Social Development Council.
January
Jerry Ell files
a lawsuit against Manitok Thompson, the MLA for Rankin Inlet South-Whale Cove,
alleging that "malicious" actions by Thompson cost him a $100,000
contract as a consultant on the construction of the proposed Rankin Inlet health
centre.
Tommy Evic, acting president of the Nunavut Social Development Council, makes
an emotional appeal to save the organization. NTI dissolves the NSDC board in
March.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Ell seeks $150,000 in general
and punitive damages, and says in his statement of claim that his contract with
Sakku Investment Corp. was terminated after Thompson raised concerns about Ells
involvement in the construction while he was still a candidate in the Nunavut
Tunngavik Inc. presidential election.
Cathy Towtongie, Thompsons
sister, won the election.
Abraham Tagalik,
president of Qikiqtaaluk Corp. quits his job after the corporation awards a
contract for the proposed new Baffin Regional Hospital to Nunavut Construction
Corp. He had been on the job for less than three months.
Resolute Bay businessman
Aziz Kheraj is sworn in as mayor of the community after beating incumbent George
Eckalook by a single vote.
Resolute has one of the
highest voter turnouts in the territory, with 85 per cent of registered voters
coming out to cast ballots. A recount is requested three days after the election,
but doesnt change the results.
Picketers gather
in front of the legislature March 5 as MLAs vote on a controversial pension
plan increase.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Kheraj, who owns the South
Camp Inn, has lived in the community for 23 years and has run for the majors
position twice previously.
"I think people wanted
a change, and I think we got the 35-and-under vote," he says.
First Air reduces
its flight service between Yellowknife and Cambridge Bay, cutting the number
of flights from three to two.
Keith Peterson, the mayor
of Cambridge Bay, says he is stunned by the new schedule. "Were way
over here in the far reaches of Nunavut, so one of the things we need to be
part of Canada and to be part of Nunavut is good connections to transportation,"
he says.
Peterson received about
40 phone calls from residents the week of the change, asking him to lobby the
airline to reinstate the third flight.
Eva Aariak, Nunavuts
language commissioner, presents a legislative assembly committee reviewing the
territorys Official Languages Act with a list of recommendations aimed
at strengthening Inuktitut.
In June, Arctic Bay residents hold one of the first in a series of meetings
to plead with the owner of Nanisivik Mine to save the towns infrastructure
after the mine closes.
(FILE PHOTO)
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She proposes to clear up
the confusion about whether Inuinnaqtun is a dialect of Inuktitut or a language
of its own by classifying it as a dialect. She also recommends broadening the
scope of the language law, giving it power over municipal bylaws and court decisions.
The Kugluktuk Hunters
and Trappers Association completes a feasibility study and business plan aimed
at opening a mill to spin the under fur of musk oxen into yarn.
The HTA has been sending
musk ox hides to a mill in Prince Edward Island, but the cost of sending the
hides across the country is prohibitive.
Much finer and softer than
sheeps wool and cashmere, musk ox fur, called qiviut, is the best luxury
fibre in the world.
Lt. General George
Macdonald, the vice-chief of Canadas defence staff, says that Northern
Canada could be a possible alternative to Greenland, as part of U.S. plans for
a National Missile Defence system.
Macdonald says that if
Greenland stops the U.S. from using the Thule air base, Americans will look
to Alert, on the tip of Ellesmere Island.
NorthwesTel employees picket in front of the companys Iqaluit office in
June. They have been on strike since May 27.
(FILE PHOTO)
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He makes the controversial
comments during a conference on climate change, sovereignty and the security
in Ottawa in late January.
February
An inquest into
the death of an inmate at the Arviat Correctional Camp makes several recommendations
aimed at preventing similar deaths.
Bruce Aasivaaryuk, 25,
was checking traplines when a blizzard blew in. His frozen body was found less
than 10 metres from his snowmobile the next day.
The coroners jury
recommends that correctional camps be set up less than 20 kilometres from the
nearest settlement and have at least two forms of transportation available.
Correctional camps are
on-the-land programs based on traditional Inuit knowledge. They often replace
jail time for Inuit offenders. Most camps have two inmates at a time. The Arviat
camp accepts up to six inmates at a time.
The RCMP reopens a detachment in Grise Fiord in July, and opens a new detachment
in Repulse Bay.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Sheila Fraser, Canadas
auditor general, criticizes the government of Nunavuts reliance on long-term
leases during a presentation to the legislative assemblys standing committee
on operations Feb. 5.
She says MLAs need more
information to properly scrutinize spending decisions.
She adds that decentralization
is aggravating the GNs shortage of experienced financial managers, and
that as a result inexperienced people are working without support in decentralized
communities.
Bob Vardy, the deputy minister
of finance, agrees with the auditors critique, but says that the GN is
working with Arctic College to train more Nunavummiut.
The Qikiqtani Inuit
Association initiates a lawsuit against former president Meeka Kilabuk to reclaim
at least five months of back rent.
Kilabuk, who was president
of QIA from December 2000 to September 2001, refuses to leave QIA staff housing
until the board agrees to review her suspension and firing.
Palluq Susan Enuaraq,
the New Democratic Party candidate for Nunavut in the 2000 federal election,
and her official agent, Elisapee Sheutiapik, are charged with failing to file
legally required election finance documents under the Canada Elections Act.
Enuaraq finished second
to Nancy Karetak Lindell, the Liberal Party candidate. She was accused of failing
to send a declaration regarding her electoral campaign return to her official
agent.
Sheutiapik faces a charge
alleging that she failed to provide the documents to the chief electoral officer,
and a second charge alleging that she failed to return unused tax receipt forms
for election contributors.
Government House
Leader Kelvin Ng introduces legislation intended to enrich the pension plans
of MLAs. The subject had been under discussion in behind-closed-doors cabinet
meetings since the middle of 2001.
Jeannie Manning
of Cape Dorset is committed to trial for second-degree murder in the death of
Davidee Adla, following a preliminary hearing in Iqaluit. A publication ban
is imposed for the Feb. 25 hearing.
Since her arrest in September,
Manning had been held in custody, most of the time at the Territorial Womens
Correctional Centre in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories.
Nunavummiut attend
the first of a series of public meetings across the territory as part of the
consultation process behind creating a made-in-Nunavut Wildlife Act. Many express
concerns about polar bear quotas, export permits and nuisance ravens.
The new act will replace
existing legislation inherited from the NWT.
March
Retired Inuit broadcaster
Jonah Kelly, Cape Dorset carver Ohito Ashoona, and Rankin Inlet hockey star
Jordin Tootoo receive National Aboriginal Achievement Awards at a gala presentation
on March 10.
Kelly is selected in the
media and communications category, Ashoona in the arts and culture category
and Tootoo in the youth category.
Nunavut MLAs vote
for an enriched pension plan on March 5, despite protests from Nunavummiut who
want more money for education, infrastructure and social services.
A group of picketers gather
at the legislative assembly building in Iqaluit with signs saying "MLAs
pension more important than health care?" and "Greedy MLAs go for
another money grab."
After four hours of debate,
MLAs pass the new law, which will see the legislative assembly spend an estimated
$2.7 million over the next four years to provide larger pensions to MLAs who
opt in to the plan.
The three Iqaluit MLAs:
Paul Okalik, Hunter Tootoo and Ed Picco, as well as Quttiktuq MLA Rebekah Williams,
vote against the plan.
The board of Nunavut
Tunngavik Inc. vote to revoke the Nunavut Social Development Councils
status as a designated Inuit association, and re-create it as a department of
NTI.
NTI president Cathy Towtongie
reveals the news to NSDC officials during a board meeting in Coral Harbour in
early March. She sits stone-faced as acting president Tommy Evic makes an emotional
appeal to her to change or at least delay her decision.
Towtongie stands firm.
"We do not really have social development in place right now," she
says.
The Nunavut court
of appeal overturns Nanulik MLA James Arvaluks not-guilty verdict, and
orders a new trial.
Arvaluk was charged with
assault causing bodily harm against his former girlfriend in connection with
an August 2000 incident.
Justice John Edward Richard,
in overturning the verdict, says that Justice Howard Irving made errors of fact
and law when he handed down his not-guilty verdict on June 20, 2001.
Population figures
released by Statistics Canada show that Nunavuts population grew faster
than any other province or territory in Canada between 1996 and 2001.
It increased by 8.1 per
cent from 1996, and stands at 26,745. In the same period, Canadas population
increased by only four per cent.
The GN insists there
is nothing wrong with gasoline in the Kivalliq and Baffin regions, despite numerous
complaints from hunters.
The hunters say their snowmobiles
are breaking down and that the gas is a different colour than usual. The GN
said its own tests show that there is nothing wrong with the fuel, though more
tests remain to be done.
The hamlet of Coral
Harbour pays $25,000 to NorthwesTel to become the second community in Nunavut
to receive local dial-up access to the Internet. But problems with the communitys
aging satellite system mean only four people can sign on at any given time.
NorthwesTel says it plans
to upgrade the communitys switch, which would allow 100 people to dial
up at a time.
April
Rueben Sangoya of
Pond Inlet is sentenced to five years in jail for a July 2001 shooting rampage
in the community.
Sangoya ran amok for three
hours, firing at two RCMP officers, a local boy, and a six-year-old child.
He pleads guilty to endangering
lives by discharging a firearm, pointing a firearm, and mischief. The endangering
charge comes with a four-year minimum sentence.
First Air drops
its weekly flight from Yellowknife to Resolute Bay, reducing the availability
of jet service to the Nunavut community by one-third.
The decision was a result
of the drop in passenger and freight traffic after the closure of the Polaris
zinc mine on Little Cornwallis Island.
"They want to concentrate
on the eastern market, fill up the flights, lowball the contracts and basically
screw the Northerners," said Resolute Bay businessman and mayor Aziz Kheraj.
The GN conducts
a second round of tests on gasoline in the Kivalliq and Baffin regions to determine
if the fuel is contaminated.
In March, an analysis of
the gas showed the supply is missing a key ingredient that helps keep engines
clean. But there was no proof that the problem was directly responsible for
damaged snowmobile engines, pistons and carburetors.
The March test pits one
snowmobile with gas from the 2002 supply, against another with gas containing
the key additive. The snowmobiles, pulling qamutiks, drive 800 miles from Rankin
Inlet to Baker Lake.
The trip isnt enough
to provide conclusive answers, so the two snowmobiles make a second trip on
April 19, travelling 1,000 miles to Schultz Lake, near Baker Lake. This time
they would use fuel from the Kitikmeot supply as the control.
Bill 1, the proposed
Education Act receives second reading in the legislative assembly, setting off
a flurry of criticism that its actually worse than the act its replacing.
"By hastily adopting
something now we run the risk of throwing out something that works, recognizing
it needs improvement, and replacing it with something that is worse," said
Iqaluit Centre MLA Hunter Tootoo.
May
Finance Minister
Kelvin Ng announces the GNs 2002-03 budget, which includes personal and
corporate tax cuts, and a $157-million, or 26 per cent, revenue increase for
the department of health and social services, and a projected $16 million surplus.
Doug Workman, president of the Nunavut Employees Union criticizes the budget
as "masking core deficiencies," especially in health and social services.
Goo Arlookto, 38,
dies suddenly of natural causes. The former deputy premier of the Northwest
Territories was working as a consultant for the Qikitaaluq Wildlife Board at
time of his death.
Bill Riddell, a
justice of the peace, scolds the justice department for failing to provide remand
facilities for accused women in Nunavut who should be held in custody until
trial. His comment follows the release of a 24-year-old Iqaluit woman with a
lengthy criminal record.
Pam Kapoor, the
acting executive director of the National Anti-Poverty Organization (NAPO),
visits Iqaluit looking for a Nunavut representative to sit on their board.
Jacopie Avingaq
of Igloolik wins the 370-kilometre Nunavut Quest dog team race from Clyde River
to Pond Inlet in 31 hours and 52 minutes.
David Kritterdlik,
the mayor of Whale Cove, voices his support for a road linking Nunavut to southern
Canada, during a Nunavut Association of Municipalities meeting in Ottawa.
Cpl. Joe Amarualik
of Resolute Bay returns home after leading 30 Canadian Rangers to the North
Pole on a sovereignty mission. While at the pole, Amarualik gets a call from
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien thanking the group for their efforts.
Premier Paul Okalik
hints that Nunavut Transportation Company Ltd. may be on the hook for Nunavuts
bad gas. NTCL bought and shipped the inferior gas, which damaged or destroyed
hundreds of snowmobiles, ATVs and outboard motors.
The Alberta Research
Council releases a report that concludes what Nunavummiut already know: gasoline
in the Baffin and Kivalliq is bad. The report says the fuel lacks an additive
that prevents the build-up of engine deposits.
Kivalliq Wildlife
Board members say they want financial compensation from the GN for the money
theyve spent on engine repairs as a result of the fuel supplied by the
GN.
Indian Affairs Minister
Robert Nault says Ottawa cant fix all of Nunavuts ills, after a
meeting with mayors during a Nunavut Association of Municipalities conference
in Ottawa.
The Nunavut Court
of Justice has only two of the three judges promised at the time of the territorys
creation. An expert on Canadian judicial affairs says the delay is "way
too long."
A GN-commissioned
study says that two years after the government began carrying out its decentralization
plan, job vacancies and morale in decentralized communties are at an all-time
low. The report says 131 of 340 jobs were still vacant. Despite the problems,
David Akeeagok, assistant deputy minister in charge of decentralization, says
the GN will not back away from decentralization.
Iqaluit RCMP seize
200 prints valued at $20,000 in an art fraud investigation.
Pangnirtungs
Ida Karpik, 63, dies from heart surgery complications. The printmaker was known
for her drawings depicting wildlife and traditional Inuit life.
Education Minister
Peter Kilabuk says French will no longer be taught as a second language under
the new Education Act. The act says French will be taught as a third language.
Health representatives
from 13 Nunavut communities meet in Iqaluit to discuss widespread health concerns,
such as suicide, teen smoking and the demand or medical translators.
Gjoa Havens
co-op warehouse burns to the ground. RCMP say youths broke into the warehouse
and started the blaze with matches. Two weeks of the communitys food go
up in smoke.
The health department
commits to turning the Pulaarvik day program in Iqaluit into a 24-hour mental
health facility by the fall. The facility will be the first of its kind in Nunavut.
Iqaluit hosts a
symposium on mental health and the law.
Researchers from
Montreals University Health Centre say contaminants found in Arctic country
food cause reproductive defects in lab rats. However, research funding dollars
have been used up, and no follow-up study is commissioned.
Gjoa Haven hunters
travel to the nearby Gulf of Boothia and harvest three polar bears. Gjoa Haven
hunters were banned from hunting polar bears in the MClintock Channel
in 2001 according to the "dangerously" small polar bear population
in the area.
Premier Paul Okalik
visits Sanikiluaq for the first time since Nunavuts creation to hear community
concerns about proposed hydroelectric projects flowing into Hudson Bay. Okalik
is joined by Hudson Bay MLA Peter Kattuk.
Fuel distribution
in Nunavut is plagued by hidden subsidies and inefficiencies, says an report
called Ikuma II: Meeting Nunavuts Energy Needs. The report recommends
that Nunavut create a new Crown Corporation to had handle functions now done
by the Nunavut Power Corporation and the petroleum products division of the
GN.
Transport Desgagnes
is charged with dumping waste into Frobisher Bay under the Arctic Waters Pollution
Act. The company denies any knowledge of the spill, whichoccurred while one
of their vessels was anchored in the bay on Sept. 25, 2001.
Jacqueline Simms
is named director of NTIs new social development department. NTI disbanded
the original NSDC in March 2002 and dismissed all of its board members.
Finance Minister
Kelvin Ng says the GN has a "moral responsibility" to reimburse hunters
and other people affected by the Nunavuts bad gasoline. Ng expects the
reimbursement will amount to several hundreds of thousands of dollars. NTCL,
the company supplying and delivering the fuel, is not asked to contribute to
the compensation package.
The territorys
capital city is caught in a development squeeze as the GN finds itself in a
hiring freeze because of a chronic housing shortage.
About 375 NorthwesTel
employees walk off the job over a contract dispute. Management fill-in for striking
workers.
A Nunavut Court
of Appeal judge rejects Edward Hornes appeal to have his five-year sentence
reduced. Horne was convicted of 20 counts of sexual assault involving school-aged
children while he was a teacher in Baffin communities in the 1970s and
1980s.
Respected hunter
and elder Josie Papatsie dies of natural causes at the age of 72.
The longtime Iqaluit resident
worked closely with
the Amarok Hunters and
Trappers Association,
the Iqaluit Housing
Authority and Maliiganik
Tukisiiniakvik.
Sustainable development
Minister Olayuk Akesuk owes more than $10,000 in back rent to the hamlet of
Cape Dorset, according to disclosure statements filed with the GN.
The Integrity Act requires
MLAs to disclose liabilities greater than $10,000.
The long-awaited
Nunavut Addictions and Mental Health Strategy is released and paints a bleak
picture of the challenges facing the GN. The report, tabled by health minister
Ed Picco, points to the territorys disproportionately high suicide and
crime rates along with widespread funding shortages.
Kivalliq residents
express frustration at the governments attention to hydroelectric projects
instead of building a road linking Nunavut to the south.
June
Plans for cleaning
up the Nanisivik mine site get underway. CanZinco Ltd. a division of Breakwater
Resources Ltd., says they will likely burn and bury most of the buildings. However,
they say theyre open to other suggestions.
Iqaluit hunters
say they dont want a mandatory hunter-training program written into the
new "Nunavut-made" Wildlife Act during a second round of public meetings
to create a new bill.
Calm Air resumes
service to the Kivalliq. Coral Harbour and Repulse Bay see the re-introduction
of flight service Monday to Friday.
Andrew Atagotaaluk
is named the first Inuk bishop of the Anglican Diocese of the Arctic.
Increased security
after the the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York City means Nunavummiut
traveling outside the territory need photo ID cards.
Nunavut Sivuniksaavut
board members say they want to extend their one-year program by another year.
Nineteen NorthwesTel
employees picket in front of the companys Iqaluit office. The unionized
employees have been on strike since May 27.
Producer John Houston
announces the Snow Walker will not be filmed in Nunavut. At one point the film,
based on Farley Mowats book, was scheduled to be shot near Rankin Inlet.
Houston cites a lack of financial incentives as the reason for pulling out.
Arctic Bay residents
plead with Breakwater Inc. to leave Nanisivik mines infrastructure intact.
Residents want the company to leave equipment, vehicles and buildings behind
for the community to use.
Igloolik and Hall
Beach hunters win the bowhead whale hunt for 2002-03.
Scientists discover
fossilized plants believed to be 420 million years old on Bathurst Island.
The first payouts
to Nunavut residents affected by bad gas are issued. The GNs compensation
package pays 75 per cent of what it cost owners to repair their snowmobiles.
The GNWT and GN
provide $3.2 million for treatment for 16 men, some from Nunavut, who were abused
by former school teacher Ed Horne in the 1970s and 1980s.
July
Breakwater Resources
clean-up plan for Nanisivik Mine receives a failing grade from three organizations
monitoring the plan. The GN, NTI and DIAND say Breakwater needs to pay more
attention to an environmental clean-up plan.
Mark Evaloarjuk
of Igloolik, one of Nunavuts veteran politicans, dies of natural causes.
Evaloarjuk represented Amittuq in the Northwest Territories legislature, and
served for many years as speaker of the Baffin Regional Council.
Transport Canada
releases a report saying the sinking of the Avataq, captained by Louis Pilakapsi,
was an accident waiting to happen.
Clean-up crews hired
by the Qikiqtaaluk Corporation head to Resolution Island to remove PCBs at the
former US military site.
Nunavut has the
youngest population in Canada, according to Statistics Canadas 2001 census.
The average age is 22.1, about 15 years younger than the national average of
37.6.
IBCs Takuginai
is named best aboriginal language program at the sixth annual Telefilm Canada/APTN
awards.
Environment Canadas
Arctic Stratospheric Ozone Observatory on Ellesmere Island is closed indefinitely
due to a lack of funding.
The RCMP opens a
new two-person detachment in Repulse Bay and reopens a detachment in Grise Fiord.
About 380 striking
NorthwesTel employees 19 from Nunavut head back to work. Union
members accept a contract giving workers an eight per cent wage increase over
the next three years.
A Statistics Canada
report says Nunavut is the only jurisdiction in Canada where violent crime is
more common than property crime.
David Nowdlak remains
in a coma after sustaining a severe beating in the 300-block of Iqaluit on July
13.
Entrepreneur Michael
Murphy announces his plans to build a 65-seat movie theatre in Pangnirtung.
Murphy expects the theatre to open in the fall.
A dozen Nunavut
youth head to Ottawa to participate in a National kayaking competition. Its
the first time athletes from Nunavut have participated in the competition.
August
Kenn Borek Airlines
resumes flights to Resolute Bay 10 months after the airline stopped servicing
the area.
Finance Minister
Kelvin Ng lobbies Ottawa for infrastructure funds to build hospitals, health
centers and road and port projects.
Premier Paul Okalik
opposes Albertas attempts to promote an anti-Kyoto consensus at a gathering
of Canadian premiers in Ottawa. Okalik refuses to side with Alberta premier
Ralph Klein who wants Ottawa to soften its position on reducing Canadas
greenhouse gas emissions by 2012.
The HMCS Goose Bay,
a Canadian forces minesweeper, sails into Frobisher Bay as part of a post Sept.
11 national security exercise.
The ninth general
assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference kicks off in Kujjuuaq. NTI president
Cathy Towtongie warns fellow Inuit delegates that more attention must be paid
to suicide rates, crime, addictions, violence and abuse in their respective
communities.
Fourteen hunters
from Igloolik and Hall Beach harvest a 46-foot bowhead whale about 24 kilometres
north of Igloolik.
Tankers carrying
a fresh supply of gas for the Baffin and Kivalliq regions start arriving. Cape
Dorset and Iqaluit are the first communities to get their pumps filled.
Tanya Nowdlak buries
her father Davidee Nowdlak who was brutally beaten on July 17 in Iqaluit. He
died on Aug. 6. A 17-year-old youth is arrested and charged with second-degree
murder.
Sanikiluaq residents
release a country food cookbook. The book is distributed to Sanikiluaq homes
in conjunction with the 2002-03 prenatal nutrition program.
About 30 Resolute
Bay residents sign a petition to oust mayor Aziz Kheraj. Concerns are raised
over Kherajs unwillingness to write a letter to the Qikiqtaaluk Corporation
urging them to hire Resolute Bay residents for the Polaris mine clean-up.
Pond Inlet starts
planning for a new airport large enough to support jets and scheduled flights
between High Arctic communities. The existing airport is too small and too close
to town, residents say.
Hundreds of barrels
of contaminated soil will remain on Resolution Island for another year due to
a scheduling glitch. The soil at the former military radar site is contaminated
with PCBs, lead, cobalt and petroleum.
For the first time
in its three-year history, the first-year nursing program at Arctic Colleges
Iqaluit campus is full.
September
Terrence Tootoo,
22, the first Inuk to play professional hockey, commits suicide at the house
he shared with his brother Jordin in Brandon, Manitoba. Shortly before that,
Brandon city police had arrested Tootoo and charged him with impaired driving.
In July, Terrence had been
signed by the Roanoke Express of the East Coast Hockey League in Roanoke, Virginia.
His brother Jordin is now playing for Canada at the 2003 world junior championship
tournament in Halifax.
Inuit leaders attending
the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, complain
that the the Arctic is ignored at the conference.
A government of
Nunavut report finds that many senior municipal employees dont have the
skills to carry out their basic duties.
The Nunavut version
of a national report on Canadian health shows that the people of Nunavut suffer
the lowest life expectancy in Canada when compared to all other provinces and
territories, and the highest rates of cervical cancer, lung cancer, chlamydia,
and tuberculosis. "It should be a national embarrassment," Health
Minister Ed Picco says.
On Sept. 30, zinc
production at the Nanisivik Mine comes to a hault.
October
Lawyers representing
Nunavuts francophone association say that in its current form, Bill 1,
Nunavuts proposed Education Act, violates French-language minority rights
guaranteed by the Charter.
On Oct. 4, Queen
Elizabeth II visits Iqaluit. During her two-and-a-half hour visit, she extends
her blessings to Nunavut, the newest territory in her realm. "Your land
is indeed your strength," the Queen says in a nationally-televised speech
from Nunavuts legislative assembly chamber.
Inuit and northern
political leaders say theyre disapointed with the Liberal governments
much-anticipated throne speech, which contains no references to the needs of
Inuit or the northern territories.
A rebuilt and reinvigorated
Qikiqtani Inuit Assoication emerges from its annual general meeting with a new
social development department and a commitment to pay more attention to social
issues.
The Nunavut government
refuses to endorse a proposal to start a for-profit diagnostic clinic in Rankin
Inlet that would use a laser-computer technique to scan for breast cancer.
Numbers released
by Statistics Canada show that one out of every four families in Nunavut is
headed by a single parent, and that 31.3 per cent of families are headed by
couples living common-law.
Premier Paul Okalik
introduces Nunavuts first human rights bill.
November
CanZinco Ltd., the
owner of the Nanisivik Mine, says a $17.6 million security bond theyre
required to post as a guarantee that they will clean up the closed mine site
is too high.
Nunavut MLAs pass
a new elections law. The nomination period is cut to only five days, and the
campaign period is cut to 35 days.
The government of
Nunavut announces that its negotiating a deal with a Labrador-based firm,
the Woodward Group of Companies, to ship fuel to Kivalliq and Baffin communities.
The GN will save $19 million over the next three years by dropping the Inuit-owned
Northern Transportation Company Ltd. in favour of Woodward.
Indian Affairs Minister
Bob Nault says Nunavut isnt ready to manage its own oil, gas or mineral
resources, or to recieve a resource-revenue sharing agreement from Ottawa.
The Nunavut government
announces a $143 million capital budget.
December
Nunavut leaders
respond favourably to the Romanow report on the future of health care in Canada,
especially a recommendation to create a $1.5 billion fund for remote and rural
health care.
A judge finds Jeannie
Manning of Cape Dorset guilty of manslaughter in the stabbing death of her lover,
Davidee Adla, on Sept. 1, 2001. Manning will be sentenced this spring.
Ivan Kilabuk Joamie
is released from custody after being charged with first-degree murder in the
death of 13-year-old Jennifer Naglingiq of Iqaluit. Crown prosecutors stay the
charges, saying the evidence doesnt justify a prosecution.
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