Katrina breeds storm of activity in the Fort
By Cherry Sokoloski
Fossil Creek Current
It's lunchtime, and line workers striving to restore power on the Gulf
Coast are hungry. Trouble is, not only is New Orleans swamped, but the
national catering companies are too.
Some lost their facilities in the storm, and others are simply overcome
by demands they can't meet. Restoring power to the Gulf Coast is a massive
job, with thousands of workers accompanying truckloads of new power poles,
transformers and power lines. Feeding all these workers is no small task.
Enter Sackits Catering and Sackits Emergency Services, a Fort Collins firm.
Owners Dale and Cindi Meyers were asked to help out the week after the
hurricane. They geared up quickly and were able to sack 5,000 lunches a
day for southern catering companies, who in turn fed power company employees
working in Louisiana and Mississippi.
To get the job done, Sackits set up an assembly line in an East Mulberry
Street warehouse. Twenty to 30 temporary workers staffed the three-line
project each day. Completed lunches were loaded onto a refrigerated truck.
Sackits sent two truckloads of lunches to the Gulf Coast, for a total of
27,000 lunches.
It was a community effort, Dale Meyers emphasized. Other local caterers
made sandwiches, and many suppliers kicked into high gear to provide the
rest of the lunch items. "Everyone has been very interested in helping
out," Meyers said, "and the temporary workers have been great."
Sackits' prior experience was also a help. The firm contracts with the
federal government to provide food to wildfire crews, and in that capacity
it has served three meals a day for as many as 2,500 firefighters at a
time. It worked the Picnic Rock fire as well as big fires in other states.
In addition, Cindi Meyers was formerly in charge of food for firefighters
with the Colorado State Forest Service.
There's no southern-style barbecue in the lunches from Sackits, but the
new clientele has had an effect on the business. Meyers is constantly on
the phone with one southern caterer or another, and one of those colleagues
told him recently, "You're starting to get a southern drawl."
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