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Shelves are bare on St. Paul Island as 10 tons of food sit stranded in Anchorage

St. Paul's only store sold out of produce hours after receiving its only shipment in roughly a month.
Theo Greenly
/
KUHB
St. Paul's only store sold out of produce hours after receiving its first shipment in roughly a month.

It's been more than a month since St. Paul Island had a full shipment of groceries. Foggy weather and a lack of reliable transportation have left the Bering Sea community waiting on thousands of pounds of food from Anchorage.

"It's been over a month now since we've had milk and eggs," City Manager Phillip Zavodil said Thursday.

The Pribilof Islands are known for challenging travel, but Zavodil said this summer has been "the worst it's been in a while."

St. Paul depends on bypass mail, a federal program that pays air carriers to deliver freight directly to remote communities, bypassing the post office. ACE Air Cargo is the only carrier currently flying cargo to the island.

The tribal government, the Aleut Community of St. Paul Island, runs the local store. Patrick Baker is the tribe's executive director. He says more than 20,000 pounds of groceries and supplies are stuck in Anchorage, and a lot of the food they're waiting on is perishable.

"The truth is, a lot of the stuff that's been sitting at ACE for a month is going to be flown to St. Paul and thrown out," he said.

Community leaders are now working with the U.S. Postal Service and another cargo service, Northern Air Cargo, to try and transfer the waiting groceries to a larger aircraft. But so far, there's no agreement in place.

ACE Air Cargo did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Copyright 2025 KIAL

Theo Greenly covers the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands for the Alaska Desk from partner stations KUCB in Unalaska, KSDP in Sand Point and KUHB in Saint Paul. Reach Theo at tgreenly@alaskapublic.org or 907-359-6033.