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January 10, 2003
Vandals feast on food bank
donations
Computer equipment destroyed
in pre-Christmas spree
DENISE RIDEOUT
Thieves broke into Iqaluits
food bank days before Christmas, helped themselves to some munchies and drinks
and sprayed juice all over the place.
Food bank volunteers learned
of the break-in when they went to their office, located in the Blue Dome building,
on Dec. 28.
The Niqinik Nuatsivik Nunavut
food bank feeds about 200 families in Iqaluit each week.
"[The vandals] basically
helped themselves to some beverages, ate a little food and made a big mess,"
Natalie Plato, treasurer of the food bank, said of the incident.
"Theyd obviously
had keys. They got the keys somehow and got into the food bank," she said.
Fortunately, the thieves
were more interested in making a mess than carting off loads of food.
"What we think they did
was just go in there and they ate some take-out food because there was take-out
in there and drank some of our juice and just threw it around and made a mess,"
Plato said.
Volunteers found juice
on the walls and equipment. A computer keyboard was ruined because of it.
But volunteers are unclear
of how much food was actually taken during the break-in.
"We had so much donations
that we didnt have a good inventory of what we had. So we dont know
what is missing," Plato said.
Plato said the incident
could have been much worse. Fortunately, she said, the culprit didnt dig
into the large supply of food Iqaluit residents had donated just before Christmas.
On Dec. 13, Iqalungmiut
gave $1,000 and cart loads of food to volunteers who had set up a food drive
at NorthMart.
The food bank had put out
a plea for food after its cupboards went bare the week before.
The Christmas break-in
didnt put much of a dint into their food supply.
"Were doing really
well," Plato said. "We had such a good response from everyone over Christmas
that were stocked for probably another month or so."
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