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January 24, 2003
Manley consults Nunavut
leaders on federal budget
Makes no promises to
spend more in the North
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
In a teleconference Wednesday
with John Manley, the federal minister of finance, Nunavut business and community
leaders said the federal government must spend more on health care, education
and infrastructure in the territory.
Manley has been conducting
pre-budget consultations across the country in the lead-up to the release of
the federal document at the end of February. He was in Prince Edward Island
on Tuesday and took part in a Yellowknife videoconference on Monday.
Nunavut leaders sent Manley
the same message theyve sent the federal government many times before,
but on the eve of a premiers meeting on health, and just weeks before
a first ministers conference on the same subject, that message took on
greater significance.
"Its just a
matter of repeating it over and over again," said Jose Kusugak, president
of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, in an interview after the forum.
John Lamb, Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc.s chief executive officer, told Manley that many of the federal governments
promises to Inuit have yet to be fulfilled.
"Many federal obligations
under the land claims agreement remain unimplemented," he said. "That
needs to be part of the way Canada looks at its obligations to Nunavut."
He cited a report by PriceWaterhouseCoopers
that said Ottawas failure to meet its obligations is costing the federal
government $27 million a year in the recruitment and relocation of southern
employees and social welfare costs to unemployed Inuit.
The cost to Inuit, he said,
is a whopping $164 million in unrealized salaries and benefits.
Manley had little to say
on the subject of Ottawas obligation to Inuit. "Im not exactly
au courant about what stage those proposals are at," he said.
But he expressed some knowledge
of the high cost of living in Nunavut. "I always make it a point to go
into one of the food stores so I can go home and tell people what things cost."
Mitch Taylor, a polar bear
biologist for the territorial government, and a representative of the Nunavut
Employees Union, told Manley that groceries are only one part of the cost of
living.
"The issue is not
so much wages, as it is equalization," he said. "Fifty-four per cent
of people with jobs in Nunavut work for government. When people get jobs, they
have to be able to live."
Manley acknowledged that
the cost structure in Nunavut is unique, but wouldnt say whether the federal
budget would make provisions for it.
"I dont know
yet and if I did, I wouldnt tell you," he said during a portion of
the session set aside for media questions.
Premier Paul Okalik joined
Manley in Ottawa mid-way through the discussion, but did not contribute, choosing
instead to give the floor to those gathered hundreds of miles away in Iqaluit.
The videoconference format
allowed Manley to meet with representatives in remote regions without making
the significant time investment to travel here himself.
The format worked well,
except for some blurry spots on screen and a time delay that made it difficult
to converse regularly.
"Is that the picture
were going to see with all those blotches?" Kusugak asked as Manleys
image faded in and out of view.
"Tell him to put more
money in for videoconferencing."
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