December 11th, 2024

Officials give overview of re-entry plan for Hay River, N.W.T., as wildfire burns

By The Canadian Press on May 24, 2023.

A crewsfrom the Government of the Northwest Territories and Parks Canada in Fort Smith head out on the line to fight fires on Wednesday, May 24, 2023 in a handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Government of the Northwest Territories **MANDATORY CREDIT**

HAY RIVER, N.W.T. – Officials from the town of Hay River revealed their plan to eventually reopen the Northwest Territories community Tuesday night as a wildfire continues to burn on the nearby K’atl’odeeche First Nation reserve.

Around 3,500 residents from the town and reserve were forced to leave their homes on May 14.

Glenn Smith, Hay River’s senior administrative officer, said getting the fire under control is a key condition for allowing people to return. He said the fire will be active throughout the summer and weather will affect its severity and the risk it poses.

“We know that everyone wants to come home. We know that this has been extremely stressful on so many levels and we are doing everything we can to get you back home as soon as it is safe,” Mayor Kandis Jameson said. “We had a safe evacuation and we are not going to risk bringing people back too soon.”

Smith said re-entry will begin with the restoration of essential services. That will be followed by general community re-entry and finally allowing the return of people with special health-care needs such as dialysis. Smith said he hopes the schedule for that plan will be released later this week.

Crews continue to tackle the out-of-control wildfire near the town that is more than 32 square kilometres in size. Firefighters are completing control lines to the south and east of the fire and blacklining or extinguishing burnable fuels in front of control lines.

“Over the last few days we’ve been throwing everything we have at this fire,” said Westly Steed, incident commander for the territory’s Department of Environment and Climate Change.

He said hot and dry conditions have made the fire challenging.

“We’ve got work to do still … When we see that it’s safe for our firefighters, then we know it’ll be safe for the community of Hay River.”

More than a dozen buildings have been damaged by the fire on the K’atl’odeeche First Nation reserve.

While there have been spot fires in Hay River as winds carried embers over the river, there were no fires in the town Wednesday morning and no damage has been reported.

Residents from both K’atl’odeeche First Nation and Hay River were previously forced to leave their homes last May due to historic flooding in the area. In October, the Northwest Territories government said it estimated the flooding caused more than $174 million in damage to homes, businesses and infrastructure in the communities.

As of Wednesday morning, 11 fires were burning across the territory, including a nearly 57-square-kilometres fire about 50 kilometres south of Sambaa K’e. Crews have been pulled off that fire due to its intensity and risk but it is still being monitored.

A wildfire greater than 38 square kilometres in size is also burning around 100 kilometres west of Kakisa. The territory said the community is not at risk.

A total of 17 wildfires have burned around 170 square kilometres in the territory this season so far.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 24, 2023.

This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Meta and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

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