On Thursday, March 12, I dropped by the FreshCo at Bathurst and Nassau for eggs. Anyone familiar with that FreshCo branch knows that there’s rarely a line, especially for the self-checkout. That day, the line stretched 40 people long. I’d been seeing headlines about supplies selling out for weeks, but this was the first time the shortages began to feel real. I made my way around the store, taking note of all the empty shelves. It was surreal. All the packs of garlic were gone. There wasn’t a single carrot to be found. The canned food aisle had been raided. Pasta was running out and a few days later it would fully be gone. The next afternoon, there was a line to get in the front door and it stretched all the way to the exit by the cash registers.
The Ontario government has since assured buyers that the supply chain is “robust,” and panic buying is far from necessary. Indeed, when I stopped by FreshCo again later that weekend, the store was once again well-stocked, save for items like toilet paper. To be clear, the whole store hadn’t been cleaned out in the first place, but the items that did run out reveal something about the nature of COVID-19 panic in this particular neighbourhood.