Garden Hill First Nation replaces unhealthy food at arena with trail mix, soup - Manitoba - CBC News
Garden Hill First Nation
bans junk food at local arena
By: Carol Sanders 
Posted: 10/24/2015 3:00 AM | Comments: 24
Posted: 10/24/2015 3:00 AM | Comments: 24
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When
Garden Hill First Nation's arena reopens next month, there won't be chips,
chocolate bars or pop for sale.
The
fly-in community, which has high rates of diabetes, has banished unhealthy
snacks from its canteen.
SUBMITTED
PHOTO
When it
re-opens for the skating season next month, Garden Hill First Nation's KEC
Arena will not be selling unhealthy snacks like chips that this child (upper
left) is eating. 
"We
have to do this," said Mark Barkman, Garden Hill KEC Arena's manager since
it opened in 2000. "I have nephews in their 20s and they have diabetes
already," he said.
The chief
and council and arena board agreed to replace the canteen menu with healthier
fare.
"We
had a meeting and they said, 'We have to stop selling kids chips and pop. It's
killing us,' " said Shaun Loney, with Aki Energy, a Winnipeg social
enterprise that works in the community.
'We have
to do this. I have nephews in their 20s and they have diabetes already'
-- Mark
Barkman, manager of Garden Hill KEC Arena (above), which is banning unhealthy
snacks when it opens next month 
This
year, it started Meechim Farm, which grows and sells Garden Hill's own produce,
poultry and fish. The farm is going to help supply the food for the canteen:
chicken soup and chicken sandwiches.
There
will be trail mix, fruit, vegetables, juice and water. "I don't know if
everyone will be happy with the changes," Barkman said. "But we need
to do this. It was a good idea."
First
Nations residents have a rate of diabetes that's three to five times higher
than that of other Canadians. In Manitoba, the prevalence of diabetes among
indigenous people was about four times the rate for 20- to 65-year-olds.
Health
Canada has blamed the high rate of diabetes on risk factors such as obesity,
physical inactivity and unhealthy eating patterns.
Every day
after school during cold-weather months at Garden Hill, as many as 100 kids
converge on the KEC Arena for public skating, Barkman said. The arena is widely
used by the First Nation's 5,000 residents and two neighbouring First Nations,
he said.
The young
and growing community now has five Grade 1 classes and five kindergarten
classes, Loney said.
While
many provinces face declining populations and labour shortages, Manitoba has a
wealth of human resource potential in its growing indigenous population, the
Conference Board of Canada and Statistics Canada say.
Loney
said investment is needed.
"Connecting
people who most need work with the work that most needs to be done -- we have
to find a way to do that," he said. "If we don't find a way for the
aboriginal community to access the labour market we're going to have big
problems."
Garden
Hill's Meechim Farm is part of a plan to help the community -- which has high
unemployment and a high cost of living -- help its people and gain control over
its future.
"We're
pretty excited about it as a model across the north," Loney said.
"The
diabetes problem isn't really strictly about food," he said. "There's
the lack of any kind of local economy. To change the food system, you have to
change the local economy. That's what we're doing, piece by piece."
Importing
less and doing more to make healthy food available to growing kids is a start,
he said.
"(Diabetes)
is removing hope from people's lives. They're at the mercy of a disease. The
farm was an incredible source of hope this past year."
Locals
got jobs and learned how and what would grow in the northern community, he
said.
The
low-cost chicken and eggs and locally caught fish gave residents food security
and replaced pricey imports, Loney said.
The fish
co-op has exported 100,000 pounds of fish from the community to southern
markets.
The
provincial government put up $300,000 to start the farm and market at Garden
Hill, Loney said.
With 500
diabetics in Garden Hill, he sees it as an investment in preventative medicine.
carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca
Republished
from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition October 24, 2015 A4
What a brilliant concept . Imagine, having real food readily available for children and youth . Paul Murphy

 
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