|
February 7, 2003
Printmaker injured in Pangnirtung
storm
Andrew Qappik receives
15 stitches for head gash
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
The blizzard that hit Pangnirtung
last week was the worst the community has seen in about 25 years, residents
say. It drove people from their homes while emergency officials struggled to
keep power, phone lines and water running.
Gale force winds exceeding
100 km/h peeled off roofs and sent fuel drums, qamutiit and small boats flying
between 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Jan. 29. About a dozen vehicle windshields and
living room windows were smashed by flying debris. Power and phone lines were
down during the three-hour storm.
Environment Canada said
the squall brought the strongest winds in recent history.
Not since 1977, when pounding
winds blew entire houses apart in Pangnirtung, has Mayor Hezakiah Oshutapik
experienced such hostile weather.
"Im glad we
didnt have to face it any longer than we did," he said.
Several hundred Pangnirtung
residents sought refuge in the gymnasiums of the communitys two schools.
RCMP officers, Canadian Rangers and volunteer firefighters shuttled people to
the gyms.
Printmaker Andrew Qappik
was struck by a piece of wood while attempting to reach one of the gyms. He
received 15 stitches to the head and continues to have neck pain.
"Im recovering.
I dont remember a lot of what happened," Qappik said from his home.
Litanie Pitsiulak, 24,
lit candles in his familys two-bedroom house and waited for the storm
to blow over.
"It was scary. The
wind was so loud and the house was shaking," Pitsiulak said.
Oshutapik was preparing
to declare the situation a state of emergency when the winds died down at about
6:30 p.m. The calmer conditions allowed Nunavut Power Corporation employees
to clean up power lines and restore electricity.
The overall damage was
"considerable" but could have been worse, one police officer observed.
"Its very fortunate
there were no other injuries," said Cpl. Law Power.
At one point during the
blizzard, the only link between Pangnirtung and Nunavut Emergency Services (NES)
in Iqaluit was by high-frequency radio.
"The mayor did a fantastic
job of keeping us informed," said Eric Doig, director of NES.
When the blizzard subsided
in the early evening, both schools had lost the majority of their gym roofs.
The schools were closed Thursday and Friday and re-opened Monday after inspectors
deemed the buildings structurally sound.
This week, community members
were cleaning up. "Everything is back to normal," Oshutapik said.
|