
Wildfire evacuation orders to lift Tuesday in Yellowhead County
Two fires have put three communities in the county under threat, triggering a string of evacuation orders and displacing around 500 people.
Yellowhead County Mayor Wade Williams said all evacuation orders in effect in the region will lift at noon Tuesday.
Shortly before 8:30 p.m. MT Friday, the county told people living in the communities of Mercoal and Robb, each roughly 280 kilometres west of Edmonton, that they had to flee.
The fire, now six kilometres west of Mercoal and 16 kilometres southwest of Robb, remains classified as out of control and has spread across 320 hectares.
Evacuation orders were issued for Peers last Thursday, a hamlet about 180 kilometres west of Edmonton.
On Friday evening, the county expanded the evacuation zone as the fire, driven by powerful winds, multiplied in size and moved dangerously close to the remote hamlet.
The fire burning to the south of Peers, which now straddles Highway 32, continues to burn out of control and has consumed around 730 hectares.
During an interview Monday, Williams detailed the battle to save the remote communities as conditions grew increasingly explosive during record-breaking temperatures and severe winds last week.
Williams said Peers, which sits just north of a CN rail track, was "very much under threat" on Friday as winds pushed flames north.
He said crews were able to hold the line with help from helicopters, CN Rail's Neptune firefighting train, and a series of sprinkler systems that had been set up in advance to dampen the fire's approach.
"That fire took a run at Peers late Friday evening," he said. "Had all that equipment not been set up and in place, it would have been devastating for that community.
"Crews were able to stop that fire right at the tracks, right on the very southern border of the community."
He said the fire near Mercoal was also considered an imminent threat due to high winds and dry conditions. A swath of the nearby forest had been killed off by mountain pine beetle infestations, leaving it tinder dry, he said.
"Fire can travel extremely quickly," he said. "For the safety of residents, we had to evacuate."
After hot, dry weather last week fanned the flames of fires burning across the province, cooler temperatures and rain over the weekend helped dampen the wildfire risk.
Williams said he is grateful to firefighters and thankful that residents will soon be allowed back home.
He said the community is familiar with the danger of fire on the landscape after a string of fires ignited across the county in 2023, closing highways, triggering a wave of evacuations and burning dozens of homes to the ground.
He said the devastation seen that summer has helped the county better prepare for the worst.
"This time around, we've got two fires burning in the county. Last time we had 13. It was two totally different stories, but we learned an awful lot from 2023. Things went much, much smoother this time."
Losses in Chipewyan Lake
The fires in Yellowhead County are among more than 50 burning across the province Monday, more than half of which remain out of control.
A dozen communities remain under evacuation orders and an estimated 4,500 Albertans have been forced from their homes.
While communities in Yellowhead County have been spared, other evacuees are beginning to learn about the damage caused by last week's volatile conditions.
Officials in Chipewyan Lake announced over the weekend that an estimated 27 structures in the remote northern Alberta community have been destroyed.
A fire moved in late last week, damaging firefighting equipment and temporarily trapping a crew overnight, as the flames flared and burned trees fell like matchsticks, blocking the only road out.
Some of the community's most critical infrastructure, including the water treatment plant, health centre, school and church, were lost to the flames, officials said.
The fire continues to burn out of control at 132,167 hectares.
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