"It helps out financially, paying for school and books," said McLarty of the $2,500 award.
Zawadski, like McLarty, hails from Rankin Inlet. She also received a $2,500 award towards her education.
"I have a nine-month-old (child)," she said, "and it's so expensive to live in Iqaluit." Both women say they want to work in Rankin Inlet once they graduate from the four-year Bachelor of Nursing program.
"Your future is now," Premier Paul Okalik told the students. "I wish I could have had this kind of support when I was a student."
Health Minister Ed Picco indicated there are 165 nursing positions throughout Nunavut. The health department could not confirm the number of vacant positions before press time but a nursing shortage is predicted by 2006.
Picco hopes the program will provide enough nursing support in communities where help is needed most.
"We're turning out people for jobs," said Picco. "Home grown talent."
Picco added he thinks it is "unacceptable" that 730 Nunavut patients are receiving chemotherapy, getting mammographies done and being cared for right now at hospitals in Yellowknife, Churchill, MB and Ottawa, as Nunavut struggles with gaps in its medical care. The nursing program at Nunavut Arctic College was developed in 1999. Currently 27 students are enrolled, with the first graduates expected in 2004.
The Nunavut government pumps about $1 million a year into the nursing program.