From the CBC:
“Iqaluit food centre sees
higher demand for meals amidst water emergency”
(Country food being prepared at
Iqaluit's Qajuqturvik Community Food Centre. The centre saw a record number of
residents accessing its daily meals in the first few weeks of the city's tap
water crisis.)
As Iqaluit continues to grapple
with the water crisis that began last month, the city's community food centre
said it has seen a greater demand for its services. Nunavut's capital has been under a state of
emergency since Oct. 12, when staff confirmed evidence of fuel contamination in
the city's treated water supply. Residents were told the water is unsafe to
drink, even if filtered or boiled. Rachel Blais, the director of the
Qajuqturvik Community Food Centre, said the organization saw a record number of
residents accessing its daily meals in the first few weeks of the crisis, with
around 250 people reaching out to the centre for help each day. The number of
people accessing the centre has since lowered but remains higher than before
the water crisis. According to Blais, the increased demand shows a clear link
between food insecurity and the water crisis in Nunavut.
"Inuit Tapariit Kanatami
(ITK) has called food insecurity amongst Inuit the longest-lasting public
health emergency in Canadian history," Blais said. "We are already in
a crisis when it comes to food insecurity in the North with over half of
Nunavummiut currently experiencing food insecurity ... [now] with the looming
threat of water insecurity as well." According to ITK's Inuit Nunangat Food
Security Strategy, Inuit in Canada experience the highest rates of food
insecurity of any Indigenous population in an industrialized nation.
(Rachel Blais, director of the
Qajuqturvik Community Food Centre.)
In order to meet the increased
demand for its services, Blais said the food centre initially hired a full-time
driver to help get water to residents as well. "We saw there was a need for water
delivery services for many people who didn't have access to transportation, or
had mobility issues, or had many children at home and weren't able to get to
the distribution points themselves," Blais said. While the centre has since stopped delivering
water, it continues to provide bottled water along with daily meals. "We've been working with the city to make
sure that we have a regular supply of water bottles that people can take when
they come for our lunch service," Blais said.
While Iqaluit remains in a state
of emergency, Canadians like Pauline Gay are stepping in to help out. A resident of Waterloo, Ont., Gay first heard
about the water emergency through her mother. When she watched the news on the TV, Gay said
it reminded her of the Walkerton water crisis that took place in Bruce County,
Ont., over two decades ago. "My mom
already lived through another water crisis … in another place," Gay said.
"We were supposed to learn from that." Gay's parents had also lived in Iqaluit in the
'80s, which is why she said she felt compelled to try and help out now. "If we didn't do something, nothing was
going to get done," she said. On October 13, Gay launched a fundraiser to
help Iqalummiut pay for bottled water. Fourteen donors have helped raise $600
so far. Gay's goal is to raise $10,000. The money will be donated to
Qajuqturvik. Gay said it is in times of
crises that Canadians can come together and help each other out. "We've got a lot of original
infrastructure that was set up for different communities across the country
that is old and ageing and needs to be replaced," she said. "People
can say, 'This is a governance problem and it's the government's fault.' We
realise there was somebody who dropped the ball but let's get it fixed." Gay said those interested in helping
Qajuqturvik can also donate directly to the organization.
^ Food Insecurity has been a
major problem for years across much of the world. People don’t tend to focus on
Food Banks or Food Centers/Centres until there is a Holiday (like Thanksgiving
or Christmas) or an Emergency (like Water Issues or a Pandemic.) I know it
takes a lot for these Food Banks/Center/Centres to constantly find the money,
the employees and the food to feed the hungry year-round. They do very hard-work
to help every segment of society: men, women, children, the Disabled, the
Non-Disabled, Veterans, Non-Veterans, etc. Local, State/Provincial/Territorial
and Federal Governments as well as ordinary citizens need to do a lot more to
help these places that provide so much with so little. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/qajuqturvik-food-centre-demand-rises-1.6234807
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