Stores swiftly stripped of perishable foods
Closures of parts of the Alaska Highway made weekend grocery trips a bit difficult as local stores quickly ran out of fresh produce, meat and dairy products.
By Ainslie Cruickshank on June 11, 2012
Closures of parts of the Alaska Highway made weekend grocery trips a bit difficult as local stores quickly ran out of fresh produce, meat and dairy products.
Loblaws, which owns Extra Foods and the Real Canadian Superstore, chartered a Hercules aircraft to pick up food from trucks stranded in Watson Lake and deliver it to Whitehorse.
Two flights arrived with food Sunday and four more are scheduled for today.
Superstore manager Roger Brown said in an interview today his store still won't be fully stocked but shoppers will at least have some options.
Brown said the Superstore can get up to four truck deliveries a day. The flights will empty six transport trucks stuck in Watson Lake.
A seventh truck is stranded at the Rancheria Lodge, and Brown said the driver was given permission to hand out food to others stranded in the area.
The truck will come to Whitehorse by road once it's cleared.
Brown made it clear that even though the company is incurring substantial costs hiring the Hercules, that bill will not be passed on to its customers.
"My milk is going to be the same price this week as it was last week and the week before,” he said.
"This is our way of helping the community out in a time of strife; we're not out to make any extra profits.”
In Watson Lake, an estimated 2,000 people are stranded in the area, although public information officer Aisha Montgomery said it's really hard to get an accurate count.
Speaking from Watson Lake, she said the community has really pulled together to help out stranded travellers or those displaced from flooding in Lower Post and Upper Liard.
The local Grade 12s hosted a chili and movie night at the school gym last night, which Montgomery said a lot of people she's spoken with have said was a great night.
An emergency Department of Health and Social Services team has also set up a temporary shelter where they've been handing out food and other supplies.
Montgomery said they had 20 people stay at the shelter last night and about 170 people visited during the day.
Montgomery and other public information officers are set up at the EMS centre in town and they've had hundreds of people a day come in.
Montgomery has also been giving regular radio updates on the situation on a local frequency.
Gerry Dobson, the owner of the Cozy Corner Motel and Restaurant in Haines Junction, had a quiet weekend after the road was opened at km 1639.
He's hoping once the road opens between Teslin and Watson Lake that business will pick up.
A busy morning at the Rancheria Lodge meant no one was available to comment on the situation there before deadline.
Some Whitehorse gas stations have also been affected by the highway closures.
Tags ran out of regular fuel last night, but a truck coming from Edmonton was able to get through Ross River.
Store manager John MacLeod said they have plenty of fuel now available.
Shell wasn't affected at all because its fuel is shipped from Skagway and the company has plenty of storage in Whitehorse, Sharon Ness told the Star this morning.
North 60 Petroleum, which supplies Standard Bus Contracting Ltd., had plenty of fuel, according to the bus company's operation's manager Normalee Craig, who had
recently spoken with the supplier.
The highway closures affected the company in another way, though.
The bus driver training simulator, owned by Standard's parent company Pacific Western Transportation and profiled in Friday's Star, was scheduled to visit Dawson Creek,
Fort St. John and Fort Nelson, B.C. but is stuck in Whitehorse until the road reopens.
Comments (7)
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Josey Wales on Jun 16, 2012 at 2:48 pm
Glad to see a few folks here in comment land that remember the old Whitehorse & Yukon.
Many here these days do not know that prior to the TO invasion of relatively recently, we were a hardy breed whom relied on each other and ourselves.
We didn't need every level of government to think for us...nor a special interest group need form to be heard when we had something to say to our "elected" blowholes.
As I stated, not too far ago we would just deal with it perhaps dig into our prep storage and put in service what we may need.
Real Yukon folk think this way because we know shit happens with shipping of goods up here. We also do know this is NOT Toronto and one may have to wait a day or so to get lettuce on a sandwich...a glass of milk...etc.
2012 Yukon? Just as many issues up here...a fabricated "crisis" by a few cry babies whom "need" dairy for their lattes or fresh sushi ingredients.
Are there still northern folks living here? Of course there is. But just as with most things up here these days, the new hipsters remolding our town/territory of colourful characters into condo town/nanny state....drown them out with the whine-fest of a crisis that NEVER existed
Who else here remembers when we called a few days without stuff...a snowstorm...a postal strike...a regular postal delivery week...fire season interruptions etc?
I can just see the headlines after 2012 fire season...City council proposes a smoke ban....CPAWS and YCS support proposed smoke ban.
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smell a rat on Jun 16, 2012 at 2:23 am
If anyone really wanted to they could have proceeded via the Robert Campbell Hwy. Was it really necessary to fly in the goods, or was that just for show? And what if anything did the stores do to promote fair distribution once the panic set in?
There's also the Skagway and Haines routes for alternate transport, absolutely no need for panic shopping. Reminds me of the panic and confusion when the Korean flight was diverted to our airport on 9/11/01. Perhaps our little community isn't as tightly woven as we like to pretend. Shameful.
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Lisa on Jun 14, 2012 at 3:10 pm
I Kind of agree with jackie for a change. This was blown way out of porportion. Its a known fact, if anyone would not have freaked out and bought everything on the shelf, there wouldn't have been a food crisis.
Like the one lady I saw leave wallmart with 10 jugs of milk and 3 crates of bread. Cmon...
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Me on Jun 13, 2012 at 9:27 am
Wow, Jackie Ward, do you EVER have anything good to say about ANYTHING????? I have yet to see you post anything positive!!!!
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Jackie Ward on Jun 11, 2012 at 8:19 am
Look how everyone panics. Clearing the shelves out of the store for nothing. I hope you enjoy the emergency food you won't use for months but in reality you took food other people might need ie:special diet. I don't want to see what will happen when there is a real disaster. Your selfish "I" attitude will actually work against you in a real work disaster. God help the Yukon.
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Frank Silva on Jun 11, 2012 at 8:03 am
Thank you Loblaws
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anonymous on Jun 11, 2012 at 7:17 am
Thank you to Superstore and all the staff.