Kuskokwim Bay communities seek aid after wind storm

The cities of Platinum and Quinhagak are applying for aid following a high speed wind storm that ripped through the communities days before Christmas.

Quinhagak is surveying the extent of the damage.

“We started the list because we needed to know how many people got damages, and estimates on how much it will cost to replace them or fix them,” City Administrator Annie Roach said.

Damages include smokehouses, sheds and fish racks blown apart. Porches wrenched from homes; windows cracked; and boats flipped, wrecking motors.

Roach said residents have been streaming into the city office to share what happened to them, and both the Red Cross and the State have reached out to Quinhagak, asking for this information.

Roach plans to submit their findings in the coming days and hopes that funding will follow.

In the meantime, residents are working to repair what they can. The most pressing issue is roofing. Many homes are threatened by water damage after losing pieces of their roofs. Tin sheeting covers most houses, and the village store quickly sold out days after the storm.

Store manager Warren Jones says that only rolled roofing remains, and that people are using a mixture of the rolls and tarps as a temporary fix.

“I’m just waiting on people to call me if they need tin and stuff so we can place an order through air freight,” Jones said.

Air delivery will jack up the price, but the other option is to wait for the spring barge.

The Quinhagak Native Corporation finished repairing what they could on the fuel pumps Tuesday that were disabled during the storm, but a lineman has to fly in from Anchorage to fix the pumps’ electric line.

Until then, workers will continue to pump gasoline and stove oil manually. The rationing of both has ended.

One of the biggest casualties of the storm was the fuel warehouse that toppled over with an employee inside.

Fuel manager John Hunter said that the building has been demolished and replaced with something he hopes won’t blow away: a giant storage van.

“We insulated inside the van and put in a floor, ceiling, and making a desk for the gas man,” Hunter said.

Surprisingly, a likely storm casualty was left unscathed.

Native Village of Quinhagak natural resource director Stephan Jones did not measure any erosion on the crumbling Quinhagak coastline.

Even the village’s famous archeaological site looks untouched, except for a missing tent that the wind carried away.

But the storm did alter the land.

“We had snow before that storm, about six inches or more,” tribal administrator Ferdinand Cleveland Jr. said. “After the storm it all melted away.”

The wind also blew away the river ice, which removed access to hunting, fishing and trapping grounds.

Cleveland said that all of those lie across the river to the north, covered now with only inches of ice. It’s impacting trappers’ abilities to earn an income and subsistence users abilities to feed their families.

Further down the coast from Quinhagak, the village of Platinum also sustained minor damage and is reviewing aid applications.

KYUK - Bethel

KYUK is our partner station in Bethel. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

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