![]() She bought six containers on that first trip to Anchorage. When I got there, I went to every grocery store I could and bought a couple from each store.” ![]() “I had to drive all the way to Anchorage at 10 o’ clock at night to see if I could find her formula. “So I panicked, obviously, because there was no food on the Peninsula,” she said. She checked Fred Meyer, Walgreens and Walmart. She got in her car and started driving to Soldotna, about an hour and a half north of Homer. “They did not have her kind in, so I bought the same brand just different, and she would not drink it,” Connelly said. She was looking for the formula she knows Sloane likes most: Enfamil Enspire. On her way home from work, Connelly stopped by her local grocery store in Homer. They were out of formula, and her 10-month-old baby girl, Sloane, was hungry. In January, Lottie Connelly got a call from her babysitter. (Photo by Tegan Hanlon/Alaska Public Media) ![]() At a Fred Meyer in Anchorage, customers are limited to four. ![]() Many stores are limiting the number of baby formula containers each customer can buy. ![]()
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