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The Food Mail Program ensures fresh fruits and vegetables are available in northern communities. (CBC)
The Food Mail Program ensures fresh fruits and vegetables are available in northern communities. (CBC)
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A Canadian program that subsidizes the shipping of nutritious, perishable foods by air to remote northern communities will be awarded to three retailers instead of Canada Post, CBC News has learned.

The government is expected to make an announcement this week that North West Company, Arctic Co-operatives Limited and La Fédération des coopératives du Nouveau-Québec will be provided with the multi-million dollar subsidy instead of the national postal service, the CBC's Laurie Graham reported.

Canada Post declined to comment.

Ottawa has been providing Canada Post with a $60-million annual subsidy to deliver fresh food to the North under the Food Mail Program. Along with letters and packages, the national postal service trucks food and other items from warehouses to places such as Val-d'Or, Que., where they're then flown to remote northern communities.

Too expensive

It's a method that has long been criticized as too expensive and time-consuming.

Last year, officials with the Indian and Northern Affairs Department said they were contemplating running the program without the carrier service, and dealing directly with food suppliers in an effort to shave transportation costs.

In April, Indian and Northern Affairs Minister Chuck Strahl told the House of Commons the program had to change.

"Northerners deserve to have a program they can count on, and we are going to deliver that to them," he said.

The hope is that by cutting out the middleman, the retailers will be able to get nutritious food to northern grocery shelves more efficiently, Graham reported.

Reduced costs

Michael McMullen, executive director of the North West Company, said direct channels of distribution along with less staging, loading and offloading will lower the distribution costs.

North West Company, a retailer to underserved communities in northern and western Canada as well as rural Alaska, the South Pacific and the Caribbean, posted a profit of $81.8 million on sales of $1.4 billion for the fiscal year ending Jan. 31, 2010.

The federal government also plans to reduce the subsidy on items such as frozen dinners, processed foods and junk foods — or remove them from the list altogether — while increasing the subsidy on fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy products and meat, Graham reported.

That will make nutritious food more affordable for families trying to raise healthy children.

"If the kids come first they should do something about it because if they come first everything should be cheaper," said Ooleepe Ekho, a shopper in Iqaluit.