Worldwide donations find way to lower Yukon
By KYLE HOPKINS
khopk...@adn.com
Published: February 13th, 2009 07:31 PM
Last Modified: February 14th, 2009 03:38 AM
A wave of donated food and cash has
swept into lower Yukon River villages over the past month, with more
than 19,000 pounds of supplies and $13,000 landing in Emmonak alone. 


Money appeared from donors in England and
Bangkok. Villagers hundreds of miles away on the frozen edge of the
state pitched in dried fish and muktuk. And, organizers say, much more
help is on the way.
Cindy Beans has been tracking the gifts of peanut butter and rice and
coffee for the Emmonak tribal council, where she watched the scene from
her office window on Wednesday. Five, six, seven people passed by
within 20 minutes on their way to the warehouse, each hauling away a
small box of food on plastic sleds and snowmachines. 
"Every day when it opens up, there's a flood of people heading over
there," Beans said. When someone donates money, the council gives out
vouchers for free fuel, 10 gallons at a time. 
About 35 miles away across the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta is the village of
Kotlik, where roughly 4,500 pounds of food arrived by plane last week
from Fairbanks. In nearby Nunam Iqua -- where there's 200 people but no
grocery story -- a Seattle restaurant is buying locals $1,600 of free
fuel using money it raised selling plates of Yukon River salmon. Elders
get first dibs on the vouchers, said the owner. 


With few jobs and a high cost of living, many
remote Alaska villages have struggled for decades, and that's when the
economy doesn't stink. This year, stories of lower Yukon River families
choosing between food and high-priced heating fuel, following a lousy
fishing season, caught the world's attention. 
The story began when an Emmonak man described his neighbors' plight in
a January letter to rural newspapers. The call for help soon spread to
neighboring western Alaska villages, amplified by bloggers who raised
money to send a photographer to the village, and then coverage in
larger and larger news media, including a CNN report over the weekend
that hinged on that same photographer's footage.
Viewers and readers responded. In Anchorage, the Food Bank of Alaska
collected more than $8,000 over just 10 days for Western Alaska
villages, said managing director Merri Mike Adams. 
The money is part of an aid effort organized by state Rep. Jay Ramras,
R-Fairbanks, who hopes to send 3,000 to 4,000 pounds to nine
Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta villages starting next week. All this amid a
simmering beef between Ramras and Gov. Sarah Palin about how the state
should help.
The state has said it
can't legally declare a financial disaster in the region, something
regional leaders have asked for for months, instead emphasizing
existing aid programs and extending the local moose-hunting season. In
a news conference in Juneau on Wednesday, Palin and her team talked
about getting more regional workers jobs in seafood processing -- an
industry filled with out-of-state employees, they say -- but details
were scarce.
Even as the governor's
new rural adviser plans a trip to Emmonak, similar tales of hardship
are emerging from other cash-poor corners of the state. 
For now, the focus is on Western Alaska, and the cause makes for an unlikely 
team of champions:
There are the left-leaning political bloggers and the right-leaning
Anchorage Baptist Temple. Fairbanks churches rallied right away.
Wal-Mart pitched in $1,000, according to a Ramras aide. 
"Spank the Dog," a classic rock band composed of Juneau political-types
-- lobbyists, a legislative staffer -- raised $4,500 for villages at a
weekend "benefit concert," Ramras said.
In Florida, a travel writer and Web site designer named Jane Townsend
read about Emmonak and started a blog of her own, collecting stories
about the region and listing ways to donate money and food. She called
her site "Anonymous Bloggers," a poke at the complaints Palin made
about her unnamed, online critics.
A Yup'ik village 25 miles from Emmonak, Nunam Iqua had received about
2,200 pounds of food and supplies as of Tuesday, said local Ann
Strongheart, who emerged as the online voice of the village by telling
her story on blogs and news Web sites.
She now fields dozens of e-mails a day from people who want to help,
and lately has been playing matchmaker -- pairing local families with
donors like Sabine Stanley, of Virginia.
"These folks don't have time to wait on the government to help ... they
need help right now," Stanley wrote in an e-mail this week. "So that's
what my family and others across the nation and worldwide have done." 
Among the other far-flung relief efforts:
• Alaska Newspapers Inc., a subsidiary of the regional Calista Corp.,
sent 4,300 pounds of food to Emmonak last month and has since gathered
3,200 pounds more. That drive continues. 
• Talk radio hosts are talking up the effort of teachers and students
at Hanshew Middle School to collect food in and outside their
classrooms. Teacher Sharon Herrell said she recently paid $188 in
postage to send the first 450-pound shipment to Emmonak. 
Students tend to donate the food they'd like to eat themselves, Herrell
said, meaning a few village families should expect cookies, cans of
SphagettiOs and boxes of macaroni and cheese.
• A statewide nonprofit that serves young Emmonak families spent
roughly $20,000 sending 12,000 pounds of food to the village late last
month. The group, Rural Alaska Community Action Program, also plans to
spend state money on weatherizing homes in the village, said executive
director David Hardenbergh. 
Last
month, Commerce Commissioner Emil Notti mentioned the weatherization
program -- which lawmakers injected with $200 million last year -- as a
way to lower energy costs and create short-term jobs in the village. 
Back in Emmonak, people are doing better since the food drive started,
said Nicholas Tucker, who first wrote about the villagers choosing
between food and fuel. 
But the
spotlight shows signs of spreading beyond the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.
Tucker said he recently saw a letter in the Tundra Drums newspaper from
a woman in Ugashik, in the Bristol Bay region, describing hardships of
her own: Few moose to hunt, few salmon to catch and -- just like
Emmonak -- a missed fuel shipment at a nearby village. 


http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/story/690057.html





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