Mr. Chair, standing committee members, panel members, good day, and thank you for coming to Nunavut and allowing us the opportunity to make this presentation.
I understand that our opening comments are too brief to allow more time for questions and answers, so I will limit my initial comments to three specific areas, though we would be happy to talk endlessly about how the federal government could take a greater role in economic development in our regions.
CanNor was an important set-up in better serving and understanding the needs of the north. The selection of Iqaluit for the location of the headquarters could not have been a better decision, and not just because we felt Nunavut was due for such a decision. The main reason we are happy is that most of the new CanNor positions will be staffed by existing INAC-Nunavut regional office staff. They have demonstrated a strong commitment, and more importantly a strong knowledge about what is needed in Nunavut and the north.
We hope that as CanNor moves forward even more programs that impact the north are moved from departments across the federal government to this new agency. We also hope that the agency will continue to receive the support of the government in the south and be given the authority to make decisions in the north by people who understand the reality of the regions we live in.
That said, we also hope that other departments across the federal system understand the importance of CanNor and make full use of the agency's full resources and knowledge. Too often we hear of programs and initiatives that are not as successful as they could have been because the right northern organizations and federal agencies were not involved. If a federal department has an initiative that involves the north, their first call should be to CanNor so they can help ensure that their initiative is a success. A case in point, unfortunately, is this consultation.
It is unfortunate that the INAC national regional office was not consulted from the beginning as to who to invite for this series of presentations. Many organizations did not hear of this opportunity until fairly late in the process and lost valuable preparation plus consultation time. In fact, INAC and NRO heard about this standing committee from one of the invited participants. Hopefully, there are no organizations conspicuous by their absence during these presentations.
Northern infrastructure... Canada went through a nation-building exercise when it developed the transportation infrastructure across all of the southern provinces. Railways, roads, ports, and other infrastructure were built to connect Canada from coast to coast. Now that northern sovereignty has become a catchphrase, people talk about Canada from coast to coast to coast and it is incumbent upon the federal government to develop the same infrastructure to the last coast.
Our needs are the greatest and our infrastructure is the least. No community in Nunavut is connected to any other community in Canada by either rail or road. There is no commercial port in Nunavut that can serve the needs of Nunavummiut. Many of our airports require substantial investments. These are all vital to future economic development in the region, and we need your support to help ensure that Nunavut and the north are treated fairly, as the rest of Canada was treated.
Please consider the following. Imagine if all of the road and rail systems heading to the west in Canada stopped at the western edge of Alberta. Would British Columbia still be a part of Canada? Would Canada be as prosperous without that connection and B.C.'s commitment to the rest of Canada? We would doubt it.
Nunavut is the land of opportunity, and as the future unfolds, the vast riches that lie within our borders will become more and more important to Canada and the rest of the world. This is only one of the reasons to invest in Nunavut. The other reason is one of fairness.
Canada invested in connecting the rest of Canada to each other, now they need to do the same for the north. To use a phrase used previously by the federal government when referring to northern sovereignty, much to the disdain of the Inuit in particular, “invest in it or lose it”.
Thanks again for taking the time to be here.