This is high tourist season in the Kenora-Rainy River district. Anglers are flying in from all over North America to fish northwestern Ontario’s 150,000 pristine lakes.

The food bank in Ignace is hoping to benefit from the catch — but not in the way southerners might think. Well-outfitted sport fishermen don’t patronize the town’s businesses or donate to its charities. But they do have a habit of overfishing. When they’re caught, the local judge orders them to pay their $150 fine to the food bank. The greedier they are, the better the food bank does — as long as Queen’s Park doesn’t find out about the arrangement.

The Ministry of Natural Resources tried to pitch in. Local conservation officers were poised to donate moose meat seized from hunters who broke the rules to community food banks. But public health officials squelched that. It forbade them to distribute game that had not been properly inspected.

The most frustrating provincial regulation, as far as many northerners are concerned, involves medical emergencies. OHIP will cover the cost of an ambulance to take people to the nearest hospital (which can be hundreds of kilometres away). But they have to find their own way home. That might make sense in downtown Toronto, but in northern Ontario it leaves patients stranded. If they don’t have a relative or friend who can pick them up, the only way home is a taxi. The cab fare from the hospital in Dryden to the centre of Ignace is $210.

These three tales epitomized the gulf in understanding that exists between policy-makers at Queen’s Park and folks in northwestern Ontario for anti-poverty activist Mike Balkwill , a Torontonian who just completed a fact-finding tour of this harsh but beautiful part of the province.

The local perspective is slightly different. For front-line workers who live in the north, the ultimate absurdity is the province’s “nutritious food basket.”

Every spring, the government requires public health units across the province to send out trained food surveyors to collect the prices of 67 items its dietitians consider essential for healthy eating. They are instructed to visit at least six grocery stores and are told their information is necessary to ensure the province’s programs reflect the reality on the ground.

In Atikokan, Red Lake and Sioux Lookout , medical professionals wonder what planet these people live on. The notion of checking six grocery stores is laughable. Northern towns have one small food outlet if they’re lucky. If not, residents go to the next town. No matter where they shop, they won’t see cantaloupes, fresh pears, bunches of raw broccoli, inside round steak or 200 gram blocks of partially skim mozzarella cheese. At least half of the items on the province’s checklist aren’t available in the north.

Public health workers gather as many prices as they can find, knowing their data is a total misrepresentation of the way people eat in their communities. The province’s “nutritious food basket” excludes prepared foods, snack foods and “foods of little nutritional value.” Often that’s all their clients can get. The Ministry of Health makes no allowance for travel costs, which can run into the hundreds of dollars for northerners.

“Why are we doing this?’ they asked Balkwill, provincial organizer of Put Food in the Budget, a citizens’ coalition fighting for low-income Ontarians . “The government doesn’t pay attention to our research.”

Premier Kathleen Wynne and her colleagues think they understand poverty. “I’m pleased that a positive, progressive plan endorsed by the people of Ontario in the last election is being implemented,” Finance Minister Charles Sousa proclaimed last week as his 2014 budget was approved by the legislature. It included a $30 per month top-up in social assistance for individuals (now $626) and a 1 per cent increase in benefits for families who receive Ontario Works and Ontarians with disabilities (now $1,086).

This won’t come close to making food affordable in the north, Balkwill said. In fact, he is no longer convinced that raising social assistance rates will get to the heart of poverty in northern communities. The welfare stigma is so strong in these towns that people who desperately need help won’t apply. Members of First Nations face deeply entrenched racism. There is a pervasive sense of lost hope.

Wynne has promised to announce a new poverty reduction strategy this fall. Balkwill hopes she will travel to the north to announce it, confronting the chasm between her government and the community leaders who run themselves ragged helping their clients navigate the obstacles the province throws in front of them.

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Carol Goar ’s column appears Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Correction - July 28, 2014: This article was edited from a previous version that mistakenly said there were no social assistance improvements in the 2014 budget for families who receive Ontario Works.

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