
School divisions mobilize in response to wildfires
A Manitoba First Nation school put out a plea to families to send their children to class more regularly, citing 'a decline in student attendance,' 24 hours before wildfires engulfed the community.
'Regular attendance is essential for students to stay engaged, participate in lessons, and develop the skills needed for their future,' Sakastew School administration wrote in a memo to families on Mathias Colomb Cree Nation on Monday.
'We kindly ask for your co-operation in encouraging your child to attend school consistently.'
The next day, the kindergarten-to-Grade 12 school was forced to abandon its efforts to re-engage students for the final month of the school year.
Instead, leaders have been focused on rerouting their fleet of yellow buses to help transport vulnerable evacuees to the local airport, located about 800 kilometres north of Winnipeg.
Schools in Flin Flon, Lynn Lake, Pimicikimak Cree Nation and Sherridon have also been shuttered indefinitely. Other communities remain on standby.
As school leaders in affected communities gas up to support evacuations where possible, colleagues in safety zones are searching for empty classrooms and gymnasiums to provide shelter.
The Manitoba government has called the Winnipeg, Seven Oaks and River East Transcona divisions to find room for displaced Manitobans who arrive in Winnipeg.
Details were still being hammered out midday Thursday, but superintendent Tony Kreml said he was looking for leads to help shelter evacuees and allow them to do laundry, prepare food and access showers at Seven Oaks' facilities.
'Public education is there for the greater good — that includes in times of tragedy and times of disaster,' said Alan Campbell, president of the Manitoba School Boards Association.
Campbell said schools are built into community response plans because they have access to fleets equipped with wheelchair lifts and restraints to transport people safely.
The Sinclair family watched school buses filled with priority-evacuees from Mathias Colomb drive past their front window to the airport on Thursday morning, and waited for their turn.
'Everybody's getting impatient – the whole reserve… Nobody's giving us information,' father Leo Sinclair said on a video call.
Landline phones went down in the community as infrastructure melted in the extreme heat, but Sinclair remained connected to the internet via StarLink.
He, his wife and their 15-year-old son kept refreshing social media for updates on the emergency response. The trio learned that evacuation plans were getting underway via Facebook the night before.
Fire chief Glenn Dumas announced in a video that priority evacuations would include babies, elders and residents who were homebound due to medical conditions.
Sinclair's immediate family – none of whom were on the initial list – continued seeking refuge from the smokey skies inside.
'(Wednesday) was dark. There were lots of trees burning and it was difficult to breathe,' Sinclair said, adding the fire is believed to have started when a resident burned garbage at the dump and it spread due to windy and dry conditions.
His son, whose school has been closed since Tuesday in response to the wildfire threat, was occupying himself by scrolling on the internet.
A government spokesperson said the province's focus is on ensuring the safety and well-being of affected students, staff and their families.
'Consideration for delivery of education in scenarios such as these is the responsibility of the school divisions and/or schools. However, the priority remains health and safety,' the spokesperson said in a statement.
The president of the school boards association echoed those comments. At the same time, Campbell noted that climate change is increasingly affecting everything in Manitoba.
He suggested it would be worthwhile to look into what kind of permanent remote learning infrastructure could be created in the future to give student evacuees continuity in their schooling.
'Increasingly, as rural and remote communities are facing evacuation – either because of wildfires or because of flooding – there needs to be a way to respond to that in a proactive, measured, pre-arranged way,' he said.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
Maggie MacintoshEducation reporter
Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie.
Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.
Every piece of reporting Maggie produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
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Canada Standard
an hour ago
- Canada Standard
'We're Getting Desperate': Chinook Helicopters En Route as 2,000 Stranded by Manitoba Wildfire
Two Canadian Forces Chinook helicopters were on their way to the Pukatawagan Cree Nation in Northern Manitoba Saturday morning, where about 2,000 people were stranded with a wildfire just a kilometre away. The community, also known as the Mathias Colomb First Nation, declared an emergency after the airport was closed by a power outage and smoke, while rail lines were blocked by the flames. Located about 700 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, Pukatawagan has no road access, and navigation on nearby waterways is not considered safe. Chinooks have a capacity of 35 to 55 passengers plus crew. First responders previously had access to smaller helicopters that were evacuating people six to 13 at a time. "We're getting desperate now," Chief Gordie Bear told CBC News Thursday. "It's getting rougher. We're going to be heading for the lake... shortly if nothing turns out, if nothing puts the flame out." "We need more resources. We need to move them immediately," said band councillor Kelly Linklater. "The community is in a panic." "I don't even like the words 'to be patient,'" added councillor Connie Constant. "We can't be patient. We need action. We need action now." Constant was responding to Premier Wab Kinew's calls for calm, during a media briefing Friday where he tried to respond to criticisms that evacuations in First Nations communities had been slow and poorly planned. "With transportation, the Canadian Armed Forces is in the business of meticulous planning before they deploy aircraft or before they deploy their troops," Kinew said. "I understand how Manitobans might look at a given situation and have questions. But I'm here to reassure you and tell you that you have the best people leading the response." Kinew said the local hospital in The Pas was under a code orange, meaning it was preparing for a mass casualty or disaster event, CBC reports. View our latest digests On Saturday morning, Manitoba's wildfire map listed the fire near Pukatawagan, designated WE025, at 9,785 hectares and out of control. The site identified 106 active fires across the province totalling 416,340 hectares. On Thursday, Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Kyra Wilson had decried "delays in response times, delays in supports," warning that "lives are being threatened by wildfires, yet we have to sit back and we have to wait. How is that fair?" On Friday, she said the situation was becoming dire, with communities kept in the dark on what's to be done. "Nobody is communicating with us. Nobody is communicating with our leadership," she told a news conference in Winnipeg, adding that communities were getting only vague reassurances when they asked for firefighting equipment, including water pumps and hoses. "We have communities that have no electricity," she said. "They have no water. They're running out of fuel, running out food." Elsewhere, the chief of Cross Lake (Pimicikamak) Cree Nation credited Kinew with getting federal support for air evacuations, the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) reports. "We have been calling on government of Canada to send the Canadian armed forces to help us. But they told me they had to wait for the province to exhaust their resources," Chief David Monias said on social media. "Thanks to Premier Wab Kinew, he called the Prime Minister and they will get the Canadian armed forces to help us." At his media conference Friday, Kinew said Manitoba has never before seen a moment where large wildfires were simultaneously burning in every part of the province. He called the crisis a "serious inflection point", with about 17,000 people evacuated from their homes so far. On Friday, Climate Central reported that inflection point was brought by an early-season heat wave made at least five times more likely by climate change. Temperatures have exceeded seasonal averages by 12.2 to 13.5C in Manitoba and by 6.6 to 11.4C in Saskatchewan, the U.S.-based analysts said, and both provinces are facing drought conditions ranging from Abnormally Dry to Moderate Drought. "This kind of heat would be incredibly unlikely without climate change," Climate Central Vice President of Science Dr. Kristina Dahl said in a release. "These conditions, which set the stage for dangerous wildfires, will only become more frequent and more severe if we continue burning fossil fuels." "Climate change-driven heat dries out vegetation and sets the stage for wildfires," added wildfire specialist Kaitlyn Trudeau, the organization's senior research associate for climate science. "Combine that with persistent drought and a locked-in high-pressure system, and you have a perfect storm." Kinew said as the fires grow, thousands more evacuees can be expected and that communities like Winnipeg, Thompson, and The Pas have already stepped up to help provide food and shelter. He said he spoke with some evacuees in Winnipeg. "(It's) very scary, very tiring, long days for people who've been on the road and in the air to find their way to safety," he said. Kinew said more outside help has arrived, including 125 firefighters from the United States. Winnipeg has opened up public buildings for evacuees as it deals with hotels already crammed with other fire refugees, vacationers, businesspeople, and conventiongoers. Manitoba declared a province-wide state of emergency Wednesday to trigger a coordinated response across levels of government. In northern Manitoba, more people were leaving their homes Saturday as wildfires continued to threaten communities, The Canadian Press reports. The roughly 600 residents of Cranberry Portage were placed under a mandatory evacuation order after fires knocked out power to the community-a situation expected to last for days. An evacuation of Pimicikamak Cree Nation, which started earlier this week, is ongoing and officials were expecting five flights to leave for Winnipeg Saturday. One of the major areas of concern is Flin Flon, a city of some 5,000 residents that has already been evacuated. A fire is burning very close to town and officials are worried a shift in the wind could bring flames right into the community. The forecast for the region does not call for rain in the coming days. Earlier Friday, Flin Flon Mayor George Fontaine said fierce winds were threatening to breach city limits and begin burning structures in the city of 5,000, located 630 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, CP writes. "Unless we get one heck of a boost, (the fire) is projected to take chunks out of our town and surrounding areas," Fontaine said in an interview. "It's looking very ugly right now. "We're begging for air support (to help douse the fire). It's really crucial." Beyond Manitoba, thousands have been affected by wildfires in Saskatchewan and Alberta, with 1,300 people in the community of Swan Hills northwest of Edmonton already forced from their homes, as have the 900 residents of Chateh in the northwestern corner of the province. Firefighters battling a blaze near Chipewyan Lake, Alberta, lost radio contact late Thursday and were forced to take shelter at the local fire hall and school. Major segments of this story were first published by The Canadian Press. Source: The Energy Mix


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Immediate support offered to evacuees: Kinew
As 17,000 Manitobans flee for their lives with little more than the shirts on their backs, some take shelter in hotels and motels, arenas or with family and friends. Where they end up depends on what they need, Premier Wab Kinew said Friday. 'The first principle is that this is one Manitoba,' Kinew said at a wildfire briefing Friday as the threat worsened. The province offered Emergency Social Services support for the mandatory evacuees right away rather than expecting municipalities or local authorities to support their residents for a minimum 72 hours, as guidelines dictate. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS 'It's important that people register as an evacuee if they have been told to leave their community,' Premier Wab Kinew said Friday. 'Given the scale of the situation here, the department of families has decided to waive 72-hour period, and we're going to help people immediately,' Kinew told the legislative assembly on Thursday. Emergency Social Services are provided on a short-term basis 'to preserve the emotional and physical well-being of evacuees and response workers in emergency situations.' The province's first priority is to ensure accommodations and food are provided to people fleeing a disaster. For those who don't stay with family and friends, staff are focused on accommodations in congregate facilities where food and shelter is provided, a spokesman for the provincial government said Friday. 'Many evacuees have already been receiving support, and as people register, the province is working with the Canadian Red Cross to ensure everyone receives supports,' he said without providing numbers or details. 'It's important that people register as an evacuee if they have been told to leave their community.' They can register online or at a reception centre. 'The reception centre I was at (Thursday) had folks who were coming from the city of Flin Flon but also Pukatawagan Cree Nation,' the premier said Friday. People from First Nations would get federal support and others, including Flin Flon residents, would get provincial support, Kinew said. Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences. 'There's just one desk where people are checking in, getting registered and getting assigned supports. When we get to who's staying with friends and family that's effectively self-selected.' He said a lot evacuees are going to head to congregate shelters. 'The hotel rooms in the province are very, very hard to come by right now and that's because of the previous evacuations, because of other folks just having their business conferences, vacations,' the premier said. 'Where we do have access to hotel rooms is being prioritized for medical patients and (those with) accessibility issues and for who staying in a cot in a congregate setting might be a challenge.' Carol SandersLegislature reporter Carol Sanders is a reporter at the Free Press legislature bureau. The former general assignment reporter and copy editor joined the paper in 1997. Read more about Carol. Every piece of reporting Carol produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Mathias Colomb residents on alert for helicopters; evacuees in Winnipeg praise response
Judith Moore was awakened by a Facebook call around 3 a.m. Friday with an urgent message from her mother: get out. 'She told me to run to my sister's next door with my grandsons,' she said Friday afternoon. 'They had their sprinkler on.' FACEBOOK With no power in the community since Tuesday and evacuation orders issued Wednesday, Judith Moore said she has been relying on Facebook, as well as updates from the chief, council and local firefighters. FACEBOOK With no power in the community since Tuesday and evacuation orders issued Wednesday, Judith Moore said she has been relying on Facebook, as well as updates from the chief, council and local firefighters. As fire closed in on Mathias Colomb First Nation — also known as Pukatawagan, about 820 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg — Moore quickly dressed her grandchildren. She grabbed bags, blankets, food, and water, and fled the house. 'It was exhausting and my grandsons — aged five and seven — burst into tears, which broke my heart,' Moore said, explaining they sought shelter at her grandparents' home further away from the blaze. 'I had to be brave for them, hold my tears back.' With no power in the community since Tuesday and evacuation orders issued Wednesday, Moore said she has been relying on Facebook, as well as updates from the chief, council and local firefighters. She's been able to charge her phone using generator power while waiting for news about when she and her family will be evacuated. That help was on its way, Premier Wab Kinew confirmed Friday afternoon. He urged residents to stay calm and hold tight. Despite heavy smoke, the Pukatawagan Airport remained intact, Kinew told reporters at the Manitoba legislature. Fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters were still running evacuation operations, flying people to The Pas. 'The situation was very, very dangerous and scary overnight,' Kinew said. 'There were many calls for help.' JUDITH MOORE PHOTO Judity Moore said helicopters have been landing at the youth centre in the middle of Mathias Colomb First Nation (Pukatawagan). JUDITH MOORE PHOTO Judity Moore said helicopters have been landing at the youth centre in the middle of Mathias Colomb First Nation (Pukatawagan). Photos Moore shared with the Free Press showed smoke and ash beginning to blanket the area. 'So many are afraid,' she said, expressing her gratitude to the firefighters who have been battling the inferno. Moore said she heard explosions overnight, which she believes came from the airport across the lake. The airport was forced to close Thursday and helicopters have been landing at the youth centre in the middle of town, she said. Elders, infants, and those with chronic illnesses were airlifted out by helicopter that same day, Moore said. She added that helicopters began landing in the community around 7 a.m., aiming to evacuate the estimated 2,000 people who remained as of Thursday night. Among those evacuated Thursday was Shirley Castile, who fled with members of her family, including her 11-day-old grandson. They spent much of the day shuttling back and forth to the airport, waiting for a flight while flames burned nearby. 'The smoke and heat had gotten so bad, it was so dangerous,' she said. 'There were a lot of people sitting around outside with children. It was just terrible. The smoke was so thick you could barely see to the next house.' Worried for the health of her newborn grandson, Castile took matters into her own hands, paying out-of-pocket for a helicopter flight with Gogal Air Services out of Snow Lake. 'They came and picked us up, took us to Snow Lake, and then a van came and drove us to The Pas,' Castile said, adding that eight of them, including several children, squeezed into a five-seat helicopter. 'We're very tired.' She and her family plan to travel to Saskatoon on Saturday to stay with her sister. She said she hoped her husband, who was still in Mathias Colomb Friday afternoon, would soon be evacuated to The Pas. Her husband, who works in public works, stayed behind to help operate the water plant. Four of her adult children were still in the community as of Friday afternoon with their own families. Two of them, both members of the local council, were helping with evacuation efforts. Meanwhile, in Winnipeg, displaced residents from Flin Flon were settling into emergency accommodations Friday after being forced from their homes. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Evacuee Christine Bell, with her dog, Mocha, who is wearing a cone because of a recent surgery to remove a cyst, drove to Winnipeg from Flin Flon and is now sleeping in her car in the parking lot of the Century Arena as the sleeping arrangements are too chaotic for her. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Evacuee Christine Bell, with her dog, Mocha, who is wearing a cone because of a recent surgery to remove a cyst, drove to Winnipeg from Flin Flon and is now sleeping in her car in the parking lot of the Century Arena as the sleeping arrangements are too chaotic for her. Christine Bell, 71, and her seven-year-old dog, Mocha, arrived Thursday at Century Arena in Fort Garry after a difficult journey. 'It wasn't easy,' said Bell, who lives with chronic pain. Doctors had advised her not to drive on highways, so she travelled with others to make the trip. Her dog, recovering from surgery to remove a cyst on Monday, wore a cone. Born and raised in Flin Flon, Bell said she's never seen anything like what's unfolded in recent days. 'It's been hard,' she said. 'It doesn't look like anyone is going home any time soon.' Bell said she hopes the Red Cross will transfer her to more appropriate accommodations — somewhere quieter and senior-friendly. 'I've had to sleep in my car,' she said, saying it's been too chaotic inside the arena, which is close to capacity, housing around 200 people. Wildfires burning in Manitoba. Wildfires burning in Manitoba. Flin Flon faced a dire situation Friday. 'The situation there is very, very serious, and we are doing everything that we can to preserve life, but also to preserve people's livelihoods and homes in the region,' Kinew said during a news conference. Mayor and council in Flin Flon were evacuated Friday as conditions worsened in the city, leaving just emergency workers, including firefighters, in the area. Donovan Colomb stood outside Century Arena as one of his nine children played nearby. 'It is what it is,' he said of the wildfire. 'If it does (burn the city), it does, we can't stop it.' Colomb and his nine children took a school bus to Winnipeg, arriving around 9 a.m. on Thursday, while his partner drove with family and arrived later in the evening. 'It's been good here,' he said. 'I know a lot of people here, and I know some of the people in other communities (around Flin Flon) are showing up here as well.' Kelli Plummer and her mother, Dian Campbell, arrived at the arena early Wednesday after joining a convoy that left Flin Flon Tuesday afternoon. 'It was scary,' Campbell said, adding that she broke off from the convoy's route to take a different path, down through Thompson and Grand Rapids to bypass the traffic. 'I just needed to get my daughter out of there.' MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Evacuees Dian Campbell (left) and her daughter, Kelli Plummer (right), are staying at Century Arena after driving from Flin Flon. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Evacuees Dian Campbell (left) and her daughter, Kelli Plummer (right), are staying at Century Arena after driving from Flin Flon. Originally from Jamaica, the pair lived in Toronto until moving to Flin Flon in 2021. 'We had heard about other wildfires that were in communities further away from us,' Campbell said. 'But now I was like, oh my gosh, now I am in it. I've never experienced anything like this before.' Added Plummer: 'We're worried for our homes. We've built a solid foundation there. And we've left everything behind. It's been very stressful. And all we can think about is will have anything to go back to?' Campbell said there's been constant anxiety as they await updates but praised the Red Cross for its response. They were among the first to arrive at the arena and were provided with meals, blankets and pillows. Scott BilleckReporter Scott Billeck is a general assignment reporter for the Free Press. A Creative Communications graduate from Red River College, Scott has more than a decade's worth of experience covering hockey, football and global pandemics. He joined the Free Press in 2024. Read more about Scott. Every piece of reporting Scott produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.