October 7th, 2024

Military responds as wildfires close evacuation routes out of N.W.T. towns

By The Canadian Press on August 14, 2023.

Transportation authorities in the Northwest Territories say the highway out of a community near the Alberta boundary that's being evacuated due to wildfires has now closed. The Northwest Territories provincial flag flies on a flag pole in Ottawa on June 30, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

HAY RIVER, N.W.T. – Members of the Canadian Forces have been deployed to help deal with wildfires along the Alberta-Northwest Territories boundary that have forced the evacuation of the town of Hay River.

A National Defence spokeswoman said Monday a reconnaissance team was on the ground in the community along the south shore of Great Slave Lake. She did not say how big the team was, nor what equipment or capabilities they were bringing with them.

Meanwhile, with the road out of town closed by the fire, residents continued to be evacuated by air.

Local officials report all long-term care residents and hospital patients have been transported to Yellowknife. No one is believed to be missing.

The Kakisa fire travelled approximately 39 kilometres toward Hay River Sunday due to high winds.

There was significant structure damage in the hamlet of Enterprise. Significant damage has also occurred to Northwestel fibre lines as well as some electrical lines.

Firefighters have been arriving from other jurisdictions, and four helicopters and water bombers are en route.

The military deployment is to last until Aug. 29. When the full complement arrives, it will be able to help with firefighting tasks such as mop-up and hot spot dousing, planning and logistics assistance, and providing aircraft for evacuation and moving personnel and equipment.

The soldiers are to come from the 2nd Canadian Division, based out of CFB Valcartier, primarily from the 2nd Battalion, Royal 22e RĂ©giment. The troops are to receive firefighting training in the coming days.

Hay River was the second area community ordered to evacuate Sunday evening due to encroaching wildfires. The order was issued earlier in the day due to the risk of a wildfire that was approximately 60 kilometres away at the time.

On Sunday, 215 people were flown from Hay River to Grande Prairie, Alta. Hospital patients were transported by other flight services.

Another update Sunday said data and voice communications to Hay River through service provider Northwestel had been compromised, limiting emergency responders’ communications, as well as to the public.

The Northwest Territories government noted online that evacuation orders were also in effect for Enterprise and K’atl’odeeche First Nation because of the effects of a fire on evacuation routes. The community of Kakisa was also placed on an evacuation alert, with residents advised to be ready to leave on short notice.

It said the lightning-caused fire was approximately 270 square kilometres in size and increased fire activity due to extreme winds pushed it within two kilometres of the highway.

Earlier in the day, transportation authorities in the Northwest Territories said the highway out of another community near the Alberta boundary that was being evacuated due to wildfire had closed.

Authorities had been warning that Highway 5 into Fort Smith could be shut as nearby fires continued to burn. On Sunday afternoon, the territory’s infrastructure department said the route was no longer open.

An evacuation was ordered Saturday for Fort Smith, with a population of about 2,000, as well as for Smith’s Landing First Nation and the Alberta hamlet of Fort Fitzgerald.

The town posted online that anyone remaining in the community should now stay put.

Highway 5 connects Fort Smith and the other evacuated communities with Hay River, near the south shore of Great Slave Lake, where many people were being taken before that town was evacuated.

Several fires are burning in the vicinity, but the ones that prompted the evacuation order for Fort Smith are the Wood Buffalo National Park wildfires, said an update issued by NWT Fire on Saturday evening.

Those fires are being fought by Parks Canada, as well as firefighters from Alberta and the Northwest Territories.

Alberta Wildfire said in an update Sunday afternoon that the Wood Buffalo fires are more than 4,300 kilometres in size are approximately 25 to 35 kilometres west and southwest of Fort Smith.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 14, 2023.

– By Bob Weber in Edmonton

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