Nunavut Tunngavik meets to discuss $255 million settlement

Inuit association received settlement after successfully arguing Inuit education underfunded

Image | Nunavut leaders group photo

Caption: Nunavut leaders pose with Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt, front left, after signing the settlement in Iqaluit May 4. Next to Valcourt is NTI President Cathy Towtongie and Nunavut Premier Peter Taptuna. In back is Qikiqtani Inuit Association President PJ Akeeagok, Education Minister Paul Quassa, Nunavut MP Leona Aglukkaq, Finance Minister Keith Peterson and NTI vice-president James Eetoolook. (Jordan Konek/CBC)

Nunavut Tunngavik's board of directors are meeting in Iqaluit this week, and on the agenda is discussing how to spend the $255 million settlement from the federal government they received last spring.
The settlement — which was reached after Nunavut Tunngavik successfully argued that Inuit education was underfunded and therefore the population underrepresented in the government workforce — will be largely used for Inuit training purposes, according to president Cathy Towtongie. The board currently plans to use $175 million for education and training.
"Along with that, we have $80 million we can use," said Towtongie. "There have been discussions on how to proceed with that, whether with Nunavut harvesters' support programs, or daycare centres, but we haven't decided anything yet."
Joe Attagutaaluk, the vice president of the Qikiqtani Inuit Association, said that he would like the money to be used to address issues like suicide prevention and mental health, as well as the territory's housing shortage.
"Qikiqtani Inuit Association has all these pile of issues raised, and we've been at this fore more than three years," he said. "We want help from the feds, and to recognize all these other issues."
About 30 people from Nunavut Tungaavik and the regional Inuit associations are in attendance at the meeting, which wraps up Wednesday.