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Page 33
It's hard to say what makes these 13 women prouder - the houses they
have built, or the stereotypes they are tearing down. They are half way
through a 4,000 hour apprenticeship program that, when complete, will
qualify them as Native residential construction workers.
As Community Opportunity Planner for the Mississauga First Nation near
Blind River, Ont., Val Chiblow pulls several programs together to get
houses built while providing training opportunities for band members.
The Ontario Training and Adjustment Board provided the dollars ( about
$90,000) to pay for this particular program's 22 weeks of classroom
instruction. It was contracted out to the local community college.
Annually allotted federal band support funds for housing were used to
purchase "house packages" from a building supply company. The
successful tenderer in 1995 supplied the materials for the 86.4 sq. m
bungalows at $27,000 per house.
The Naadmaadwiiuk Management Board, which manages job creation and
training programs for Algoma area Aboriginals, kicked in training funds
that made it possible to pay the apprentices $7.50 per hour. (When
funding couldn't be found to pay the women for their final eight weeks
in the classroom they unanimously opted to finish the job without the
pay.)
When the course that began in January of 1995 was advertised as open to
native women with a minimum Grade 10 education, 26 applications were
submitted within seven hours. The unexpected deluge of interest
prompted Chiblow to get permission to add five more "seats" to the 10
originally approved. So far, of the 15 who started, only two have
withdrawn (one when she landed a full-time job; the other due to back
problems).
At a recent luncheon, Tammy Armstrong, Cindy Boyer, Janice Boyer, Kelly
Boyer, Roberta Boyer, Sandra Boyer, Gwen Cada, Mary Chiblow, Yvette
Jackpine, Felomena Labranche, Cheryl Morningstar, Linda Niganobe and
Trudy Niganobe were recognized for their accomplishments. All 13 had
passed the exam that concludes the program's classroom instruction and
logged 24 weeks of building experience.
Val has implemented many other band projects, but this one she
considers special, because she believes the women are doing so much more
than building houses. They are building personal and community pride
and serving as positive role modes for other girls and women in the
community.
Last summer, after eight weeks of braving the elements, biting bugs and
blackened fingernails, the construction workers were still brimming with
enthusiasm as they sweated the houses into shape. The women worked in
two crews, one watched over by instructor, Robin Horwath, the other
under the supervision of carpenter, Roy Jackpine.
"I'm surprised at how fast they are catching on. I've worked with
people in the trade for 17 years, they've caught on as fast as anyone
I've worked with," Horwath said as his crew continued their hammering
from the rafters. He confessed that he hadn't known what to expect at
first. "I didn't know what to think. I just didn't know how they would
handle the 'bull work' of the foundation but they handled it extremely
well."
The women had some doubts of their own.
"We were too scared to go up on a roof without being tied to it just a
few weeks ago," Cindy Boyer admitted, then adds with a healthy pinch of
pride, "but now we do a dance up there."
"There were 15 of us who didn't know how to do any of this. We never
held a hammer or touched a block, but we've encouraged each other," said
Yvette Jackpine, agreeing with her peers that pulling together, both
emotionally and physically, has been their source of strength.
There were those who said they'd never do it.
"They thought that the women weren't capable of lifting (the blocks and
the roof trusses), that they weren't physically fit for the work," said
Nanette Boyer, whose sister, Kelly is an apprentice.
But, with an attendance record Horwath called "exceptional", workers so
gung-ho they often showed up early even when star time was 7 a.m., and
with six new houses ready for decorating and habitation (apprentice
Linda Niganobe now lives in one of them), community opinion has changed.
"I think the general opinion of the community now is they are very
proud of the women and they are saying - are they ever fast, are they
ever doing a good job," Val Chiblow said.
The women need another 2,000 hours of supervised work experience for
full certification. The plan is to hire the women again this year.
Besides the usual five, the band has decided to purchase the materials
for several additional houses this year using money from a trust fund
established through a recent land claim settlement. While new job
opportunities are the obvious pay-off for these women, even if they
never get paid to pound in another nail, their time and effort won't
have been wasted. The many useful skills they now possess have them
relishing a new sense of independence and accomplishment. And they talk
about the other valuable lessons they have learned: How to work as a
team; that it feels good to work; that the harder or scarier a job is,
the better it feels to have done it; that confidence comes from success
and accomplishment.
And there, standing solid and substantial before the eyes of the entire
community, are the houses - modest, functional, sturdy shelters that
should be there for decades to come.
In one builder's words: "Twenty years down the road we'll be able to
say, or our kids will, those are the houses that our moms built."
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