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September
28, 2001
Diavik, KIA sign job
agreement
Mine pledges to offer
training, work to Kitikmeot Inuit
Nunatsiaq News
IQALUIT The Diavik diamond mine and the Kitikmeot Inuit
Association have struck a deal to help provide jobs for KIA beneficiaries.
The two groups signed a "participation agreement" in
Kugluktuk on Sept. 23.
The agreement states that Diavik will offer training, employment
and business opportunities to the Inuit of western Nunavut. In
return, it requires KIA to provide the mine with up-to-date listings
of available workers and their skills, as well as a registry of
Inuit-owned businesses.
"Rather than this being a one-sided approach, what we said
is, for us to be successful, were going to have to work together,"
said Diavik spokesman Tom Hoefer. "So in these agreements,
both sides make commitments to do certain things."
Diavik is slated to open in 2003. Though the mine site is located
in the Northwest Territories, the land surrounding it was traditionally
used by Kitikmeot Inuit. Moreover, the mine is in the watershed
of the Coppermine River, which flows into the Arctic Ocean near
Kugluktuk.
Inuit, therefore, "have a very special interest in the water
quality of the river," Hoefer said.
For those reasons, Hoefer said, Inuit have as much stake in the
mine as do residents of the NWT. Diavik, therefore, had an incentive
to strike an agreement with them.
Keith Peterson, who was KIAs chief negotiator on the agreement,
said the document does not set out a certain number or percentage
of Inuit that Diavik must hire.
"If people are willing and qualified, theyll certainly
receive high priority," he said.
Diavik has already begun training programs with Kitikmeot residents.
Last winter in Kugluktuk, the mining company held courses for
tradespeople and cooks. This winter the company will be working
with the community to train residents while laying a new concrete
floor in the local arena.
When the mine opens, Diavik expects to employ about 400 workers.
Hoefer said the company aims to have about 160 of those
40 per cent be aboriginal.
There are a total of 1,100 construction workers currently helping
to build the mine. Peterson said that probably 20 to 30 of those
are Kitikmeot residents.
Peterson said the participation agreement took about a year-and-a-half
to negotiate.
"Everybody is pretty happy," he said. "Theres
going to be lots of benefits going to the Inuit here, and any
extra funds we can get into the communities is great."
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