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December 20, 2002
Iqalungmiut pitch in to
rescue food bank
More than 200 Iqaluit
families will have food to eat this Christmas, thanks to the generosity of Iqaluits
warm-hearted residents
DENISE
RIDEOUT
With its cupboards bare,
it looked like it was going to be difficult for the Nunavut food bank to feed
families during the Christmas season.
But Iqaluit residents stepped
up to offer a helping hand and donated $1,000, and cart-fulls and boxes of groceries.
On Dec. 13, volunteers
with the Niqinik Nuatsivik Nunavut food bank announced they wouldnt be
able to open their doors the next day because they had entirely run out of food.
"By the previous Saturday
it was bare," Denise Coulter, secretary treasurer of the food bank, said
in an interview.
They put out a plea for
$800 worth of food. Volunteers set up a booth at the Northmart store hoping
shoppers would donate some of their groceries to the food bank.
The volunteers were pleasantly
surprised when they tallied the donations at the end of the day. Iqaluit residents
had given them $1,000 in cash, along with boxes and boxes of food.
"That was pretty tremendous,"
Coulter said. "It was really needed, so were in a good situation
now."
The food bank feeds about
200 people in Iqaluit every week. It provides them with a bag of groceries,
which contains non-perishable food items.
Because the centre doesnt
have any core funding, it totally relies on donations.
"Its kind of
a situation where we go week to week. We really dont know if were
going to be able to open," Coulter said.
Since holding its food
drive on Saturday, residents and local companies are now eager to donate.
"We just wanted to
make people aware that its a community issue and we need a community response,"
Coulter said.
A grocery store based in
the South is sending fresh vegetables to the food bank this week. That means
families will get a treat during the holiday season.
"Its not something
we do on a regular basis, but where its Christmas, we wanted to do something
special," Coulter said.
On Nov. 30 the Nunavut
food bank received the biggest gift its ever received since it opened
last year.
First Air donated $16,000
from the money it collected from ticket sales to its annual charity ball.
The food bank hasnt
officially received the money yet, and thats why it found itself in a
tough situation last week.
Once the funding comes
through, Coulter said, the food bank wants to look at expanding. Right now,
it just serves people in the Baffin region.
Some of the $16,000 will
go towards long-term planning and fundraising efforts.
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