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NUNAVUT STUDENT ENROLMENT 2022-23 (AS OF SEPT. 30)

Qikiqtani: 5,134

Kivalliq: 3,364

Kitikmeot: 2,048

Total: 10,629

Government of Nunavut pendently of the territorial government. As of 2021-22, there were 250 such spaces available across Nunavut.

$273.5 departmental budget

The Department of Education has an operations and maintenance budget of $273.5 million in 2023-24, up from $252.3 million in 2022-23.

The education budget represents 13.5 per cent of GN’s overall operations and maintenance (O&M) spending this fiscal year, and that’s separate from Nunavut Arctic College, which accounts for two per cent of yearly government O&M spending on its own.

The amount of money allocated to the Department of Education trails only the Department of Health ($469.6 million, or 23.2 per cent) and Community and Government Services ($293.8 million, 14.5 per cent).

The Government of Nunavut anticipates putting $197.8 million toward compensation and benefits for education department staff in 2023-24, up from $184.5 million the previous year.

Early learning and child care will get $4.3 million from the territorial government in 2023-24.

When it comes to capital estimates, the Department of Education ranks third among departments again, at $47.7 million, or 14.1 per cent of the GN’s planned capital spending in 2023-24. That’s down from last year when $50 million was put into capital projects for education.

Among the major projects moving through the queue are a new high school in Taloyoak, major renovation and addition at Sakku School in Coral Harbour, major renovations in Arctic Bay and an addition to Ecole des Trois-Soleils in Iqaluit.

Court updates in language battle

A dispute between land claims organization Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated (NTI) and the Government of Nunavut over the provision of Inuktitut education from K-12, which became a legal battle in 2021, was seemingly moved forward in early March when a Nunavut judge overruled the GN’s attempt to have the case thrown out. The territorial government subsequently filed an appeal in April.

NTI is seeking to force the GN to offer Inuktitut instruction for all grade levels within five years. The GN’s existing plan could take until 2039 to be fully implemented.

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