Nakurmiik. Thank you. I really appreciate being able to speak here this morning.
I'm the president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami. ITK is the national representational organization for the Inuit of Canada. All Inuit in Canada have concluded modern treaties with Canada. The Inuit treaty organizations are the Nunatsiavut Government, Makivvik, Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated and the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation.
Our homeland, Inuit Nunangat, comprises over 75% of Canada's shoreline and over 36% of Canada's land mass. The social and economic disparities between Inuit in Inuit Nunangat and Canadians residing in the south are nearly as vast as this territory.
The dramatic expansion of procurement opportunities for Inuit is one of the key elements of reducing these disparities. Canada is an arctic state and requires robust infrastructure, labour markets and business climates in order to ensure Canada's Arctic is secure and prosperous.
Canada and Canada's allies should support an indigenous procurement policy that will enable Inuit, Inuit treaty organizations and Inuit businesses to contribute to the business climate reforms, enhanced labour market measures, and shifts in civilian and defence procurement policy to ensure a continued and growing Canadian ability to work in the Canadian Arctic. Inuit interests are Canada's interests within Inuit Nunangat.
Our shared interests are our strength, and by working together we can make Canada a stronger, safer and more secure country. Our work on procurement has most recently been developed through the Inuit-Crown Partnership Committee. In 2016, Inuit and the Crown signed the Inuit Nunangat declaration in Iqaluit, Nunavut. This declaration establishes the Inuit-Crown Partnership Committee, which is a vehicle for representatives of the Crown and Inuit leadership to identify shared priorities for action, to create work plans and to work together on time-bound and whole-of-government deliverables to achieve our shared goals.
One of our shared priorities is procurement and involves representatives of Inuit treaty organizations, as well as federal officials from Indigenous Services Canada, Public Services and Procurement Canada, Employment and Social Development Canada, Treasury Board Secretariat, Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, Natural Resources Canada, CanNor and other regional development agencies.
Much of this work involves work to support the transformative indigenous procurement strategy. Much of our work has been focused on developing definitions for Inuit businesses. Each Inuit treaty organization has already developed definitions of an Inuit business. In some cases, the definition of an Inuit business is related to section 35 treaty rights, so both Inuit and the Government of Canada have experience in applying them.
Together, the working group developed a definition of an Inuit business outside Inuit Nunangat and revised procurement guidance and policies to increase Inuit participation in federal procurement. This guidance includes directing procurement officers to refer to the regional Inuit business firm registries when verifying who is an Inuit business. This is in line with Inuit self-determination, a fundamental part of economic reconciliation.
Guidance also includes providing targeted advance notice of procurements within Inuit Nunangat to allow Inuit businesses and firms to prepare a bid. At the same time, Inuit and Canada are finalizing definitions for an Inuit business. Canada has been working on the outsourcing of the indigenous business directory to a third party indigenous organization. Indigenous Services Canada seeks to outsource this by March 31, 2025. ITK is not in favour of outsourcing the indigenous business directory. Inuit have a relationship with the Crown and not with a third party. Outsourcing may undermine this relationship and the work that has been achieved through the Inuit-Crown partnership process.
Nakurmiik.