Raspberries 50 cents apiece and other revelations at a far north grocery store - Action News
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Raspberries 50 cents apiece and other revelations at a far north grocery store

The two stores in Attawapiskat both say they make less profit or none at all on some items to keep costs low for the community.

Some on the James Bay Coast rely on 'wild food' because of high grocery costs

John Tomagatick, 67, loads his $80 worth of groceries into his truck at the Northern Store in Attawapiskat. (Erik White/CBC)

Bobby Spence always finds room in hismonthly grocery budget and his stomach for at least one night of spaghetti and Caesarsalad.

But the 41-year-old inAttawapiskatsays his monthly social assistance cheque rarely provides him with 30 days worth of meals in an isolated community where grocery bills are inflated by shipping costs.

"I find the prices are really expensive. I don't have enough to last me a month," says Spence, who is unemployed, but just completed training to be an Internettechnician.

Here's how much produce costs in Attawapiskat

7 years ago
Duration 0:56
Can you guess how much produce costs in this northern Ontario community?

JohnTomagatick, 67, loads $80 dollars worth of bread, coffee whitener and other itemsinto his truck outside the Northern Store inAttawapiskat. He expects it will last just a few days for his large family.

He remembers the days when Cree people used to rely on the land and getting goodmeant harvesting goose, moose, caribou and fish. It's how some still avoid big grocery bills.

"[It's] alot of help to get wild food in the community. But some people really like it and other people don't like it very much," says Tomagatick.

John Henry, 40, says his grocery bill keeps getting bigger.

"It's way to the top with the prices now. Can't even get yourself four grocery bags [without paying]$200-$300," he says.

The Northern Store is the main place to buy groceries and do other shopping in Attawapiskat. (Erik White/CBC)

But the Northern Store says it has actually done a lot to keep prices from climbing at its stores onthe James Bay Coast.

DerekReimer, the director of business development for the parent Northwest Company, says thanks to federal food subsidies through the Nutrition North program, and his company's efforts to ship food on the winter road and then store it in warehouses, the cost of many grocery items has fallen 10 per cent since 2011.

ButReimernotes that inflation has risen by about just as much since then.

He says the Northern Store provides free fruits and vegetables to school kids in the far north and also helps out with breakfast programs, butReimerwould like to see the government tie food subsidies to inflation and pump up social assistancechequesfor people who live in isolated communities.

"We are trying to be part of the solution to this challenge," he says.

A customer walks into the MKS general store in Attawapiskat, which opened in 1976. (Erik White/CBC)

The other store inAttawapiskatisMKS, a general store that opened in 1976.

It doesn't have produce, but does havemilk, eggs, dry goods, canned food and frozen meals, which manager SylviaKoostachin-Metatawabinsays are often sold at cost.

"The high cost of living has been gradually going up over the years," she says.

"We try to look at our community members needs, at the same time looking at it from a business perspective in terms of profit."

Koostachin-Metatawabin, who is also onAttawapiskatcouncil, says another way to combat the high cost of living is to create jobs and get more people off of welfare.

She says governments, from her own First Nation all the way to Ottawa, don't do enough to support on reserveentrepreneurslike her who can expand and put more people to work.

"I don't know. We're just trained to think that your own people can't provide the service. Maybe it's just the colonial mentality people have," saysKoostachin-Metatawabin.