Fort McMurray's food bank has been overwhelmed with demand since a series of disasters hit the northern Alberta community. "We've never really needed a forklift but we're currently unloading upwards of three semis a week," Arianna Johnson, executive director of the Wood Buffalo Food Bank, told Fort McMurray Today.

A worker at the Wood Buffalo Food Bank unloads a semi-truck full of food. The food bank normally unloads two semi-trucks each year.

There's a lineup outside the @WBFoodBank this morning, people flowing quickly through it. A big donation coming soon pic.twitter.com/g3OZXpWcdQ — Sarah Kraus Global (@SarahNKraus) August 2, 2016

Right now, the non-profit is open nine hours each day, but has been forced to close early when it hits its daily cap of 150 hampers. Johnson told CBC News the organization has given out 4,915 hampers for June and July. Fort McMurray was already hurting from Alberta's recession when a massive wildfire forced the evacuation of more than 88,000 residents from the area in May. Many homes were destroyed, while smoke damage left others uninhabitable.