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Manitoba

Berens River chief seeks emergency food after Manitoba power outage

People in Berens River are frustrated after it took Manitoba Hydro 2 days to restore power knocked out by last weekends windstorm.

'Everything melted. We had to cook outside ... to try to cook everything, because it started to smell'

RAW: Ruthann Cook shows the freezer items that have thawed because of the power outage

9 years ago
Duration 1:46
RAW: Ruthann Cook's community of Berens River lost power for 2 1/2 days. She lives with and feeds 15 family members, and has tried to cook everything in the freezer before it spoils.

A Manitobacommunity is frustrated after it took Manitoba Hydro 2 days to restore power knocked out by last weekend's windstorm.

Residents in Berens River First Nation rely on freezers packed with meat and fish to feed the communitywhere food prices are high. The power outage forced residents to cook or throw out future meals.

Ruthann Cook's freezer is packed with meat and fish that feeds 15 people. Most of the food had to be cooked or thrown out after an extended power outage. (CBC)
"Everything melted. We had to cook outside untilabout 9 p.m. last night to try to cook everything, because it started to smell," said Ruthann Cook, whose freezer stores food for 15 people.

"I was worried about the kids," Cook said.

"It's very sad," said Berens River ChiefJackie Everett."Things have to change, is what I'm thinking."

After speaking with residents, Everett believes a lot of people lost all their food or the majority of their frozen andrefrigeratedfood.

She was told Thursday night thatpeople on social assistance in her community would receive two weeks of emergency government aid to compensate for food losses, but that doesn't help low-income members who are also struggling, she said.

"I'm here (in Winnipeg) to try to meet with various people, asking for assistance," said Everett.
Berens River Chief Jackie Everett is in Winnipeg meeting with the federal government and the Red Cross, hoping to secure emergency food to replace what spoiled during a power loss this week. (CBC)

She's scheduled meetings with staff at Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development and the Red Cross. Everett is also advocating on behalf of nearby Poplar River First Nation, because that community lost their telephone connection in the recent windstorm and is unable to call out for help, she said.

"I'm asking for some emergency assistance to compensate for food. That's all I'm asking for," said Everett.

The chief isdisappointedwithManitoba Hydro's 2 day response time, but theutility said it does notguarantee power.

"It angers me," said Everett. "There's a history in how Hydro is created. You need water and you need land. They use our First Nations with no compensation back."

Everett said she plans to meet with the federal government andcreate a futureemergency plan for eastern Manitoba, whichwould include emergency generators,to cover future Hydro outages.