Saskatoon

Northern residents with spoiled food from power outages to each receive $100 from province

The Saskatchewan government is set to provide northern residents with $100 each to help them recover money from food that spoiled over the more than two days the dozen communities were without power.

Mayor of La Loche, Sask., says $100 not enough with rising food costs

Thick black smoke billows in the distance with a backdrop of clear blue sky. a home and paved road appear in the foreground.
The Village of La Loche was placed under an evacuation order due to an encroaching wildfire on May 4, 2023, which was later rescinded. It's one of the communities that lost power in mid-May due to wildfires and is eligible for compensation. (La Loche Wildfire Update Group/Facebook)

The $100 in compensation the Saskatchewan government is sending to help northern residents who lost food in the two-and-a-half days without power last week is not enough, according to a local mayor.

On Friday, the province said it would offer $100 to each resident in a dozen northern communities as a grant to cover grocery costs if their food spoiled.

"The residents feel let down by the government, with the cost of living $100 is simply a small amount," said La Loche Mayor Georgina Jolibois.

She said it's not enough for people like single parents with multiple kids, including covering baby formula. 

"The province is definitely competing with Clearwater River Dene Nation, the band gave out … $200 to buy groceries," Jolibois said.

La Loche, located roughly 430 kilometres northwest of Prince Albert, was previously under an evacuation order but is no longer, though said not many residents of the community have returned home because of how fires are affecting roadways.

WATCH | As wildfires in northwestern Saskatchewan impact roadways, Saskatchewan focusing on getting food and fuel into communities:

More people forced from their homes as Sask. activates emergency operations

2 years ago
Duration 1:58
Wildfires in northwestern Saskatchewan continue to spread forcing people from their homes. The province activated its emergency operations centre to beef up its response. With highways closed, it's focusing on getting food and fuel into communities and helping those who had to get out.

As of Sunday at 3 p.m., the Highway Hotline showed that Highway 155 — which was temporarily closed because it was surrounded by wildfires — has reopened but with low visibility because of smoke.

Jolibois said because of the highway closure, the stores that were open were without groceries like bread because supply trucks could not get through. She expects the roadway to intermittently be closed at times because of the wildfires. 

Jolibois said she spoke with provincial leadership last week, saying they wanted help with food compensation because the residents had to throw out food. Later that week, she was told that money was on its way.

Funds provided outside of disaster assistance program

The northern communities — including places like La Loche, Buffalo Narrows, Buffalo River Dene Nation, Dillon and Descharme Lake — were without power from about 3 p.m. on Sunday until shortly after 1 a.m. on Wednesday, attributed to the wildfire activity plaguing the north.

Community leadership, like Jolibois, will distribute the money to residents in the community after the grant is issued from the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency.

"The lengthy interruption in power caused a lot of food to spoil," said Christine Tell, Minister of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety.

"These funds will provide relief to residents and communities who do not originally qualify for support through the Provincial Disaster Assistance Program."

The disaster assistance program allows local authorities to apply for financial assistance for non-insurable costs like replacing damaged infrastructure or pre-emptive measures like fireguards and sprinklers.

The province is asking people who own a cabin or second property outside of the communities, but that was affected by the outage, to call the disaster assistance program at 1-866-632-4033.

Wildfires burn thousands of kilometres of land

Wildfires continue to burn thousands of square kilometres in the north, with three of the wildfires larger than 1,000 square kilometres, the largest being about 4,310 square kilometres as of Sunday morning.

There are 27 active wildfires, seven of which are not contained.

All of central Saskatchewan is under an air quality advisory because of wildfire smoke, with all of the western half of the province also facing advisories.

Highway 165 west of La Ronge is closed due to a wildfire, while others in the most affected regions — from Buffalo Narrows to Beauval — are under a visibility advisory as of Sunday afternoon.