IQALUIT, Nunavut - Ottawa is to pay an Inuit
land-claim group more than $250 million to settle a long-standing
lawsuit and improve training for Inuit to enter the territorial civil
service.
The payment is included in a previously
announced deal for more than $300 million that ends a nine-year-old
claim against the federal government by Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., the
group that oversees the Nunavut land claim.
"There's
a lot of interest in the Arctic now and we have a large, untrained
Inuit work force," Cathy Towtongie, NTI president, said Monday. "We have
to deal with that situation now."
The land claim
guaranteed that Inuit would hold the same percentage of jobs in the
territorial government that they do in the general population — about 85
per cent. But they have never held close to that number. The level has
been stuck at about 50 per cent for years.
A
conciliator's report concluded in 2005 that the reason has been Ottawa's
consistent underfunding of education in the territory. Retired justice
Thomas Berger found that underfunding has resulted in graduates that are
literate in neither English nor Inuktitut. He recommended a bilingual
education program paid for through an extra $20 million a year from the
federal government.
NTI filed its lawsuit,
claiming $1 billion in damages, after the report's release. That was
based on wages the group said the Inuit could have earned from their
share of government jobs if they'd been educated well enough to fill
them.
About $175 million of the settlement is to
go into a fund to provide Inuit with necessary job skills. That money is
to be controlled by NTI and the territorial government.
It
could fund a repeat of a program to train Inuit lawyers, said
Towtongie. It could also fund programs in the trades or in skills such
as accounting. The federal government is to pay for a labour market
analysis on what kind of training is needed.
The fund is not to be used to upgrade Nunavut's overall education system.
"The
hope is that this $175 million can be used to supplement some things in
the education system, but it's not intended to replace the (territorial
government's) obligation," Towtongie said.
The
Nunavut government is separately pursuing more federal money to upgrade
education and make it more bilingual, said education deputy minister Joe
Kunuk.
Kunuk said the territory is already
implementing some measures to improve education in Inuktitut, such as
standardizing curriculum and moving toward making the written language
consistent.
Another $80 million is to go into a
trust fund administered by NTI. It is to be used to fund anything from
business development to social programs such as suicide prevention.
Ottawa
has also promised another $50 million over eight years to fund further
training programs. The agreement also includes promises of higher
funding for wildlife management and planning organizations.
— By Bob Weber in Edmonton. Follow him on Twitter at @row1960.http://www.cfra.com/NationalCP/Article.aspx?id=463958
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