
Flin Flon wildfire evacuees gather at Assiniboine park for barbecue
Social Sharing
As thousands of evacuees remain out of their homes due to wildfires, some from Flin Flon are looking to stay connected to their community in Winnipeg.
Wildfire evacuees from Flin Flon got together at Assiniboine Park on Tuesday evening for a Barbeque gathering. More than 50 people attended, including families, adults, kids and seniors.
Organizer Luis Nikkel says they planned to feed almost 1,000 to 1,500 people, not only from Flin Flon but also from other affected communities. He says get-togethers like this are therapeutic for the evacuees.
"It's basically to just get the community together so that they can socialize and have a bite to eat and have fun," said Nikkel.
He says he reached out to a lot of his friends who sponsored this event and helped spread the word through social media.
Nikkel, a development miner by profession, is one of the evacuees from Snow Lake. He left a week ago.
"It felt a little chaotic, because I was woken up at 9:00 in the morning and I just had three hours to leave … there was a lot of thick smoke in Snow Lake due to the wildfires," he said.
Isabel Plamondon said events like this help her reconnect with her community and be in a familiar environment.
"It's a little surreal, because I know everybody is not doing what they are expecting to be doing. It is really nice to connect with people that I hadn't seen, or hadn't been able to reach out to earlier when things were going on," Plamondon said.
Another evacuee, Dorothy Dorion, says she is not happy with the arrangements in Winnipeg for the evacuees, as she is living in one hotel room with seven other people.
"It's a lot to handle and it's very chaotic," she said.
"There's a lot going on all the time and you got to stay on top of things and the financial help is not there now. Everyone is struggling with the funding and food and clothes," said Dorion.
Some evacuees, like Bob Lyons, were keeping a close eye on things back home. He's been monitoring his home through his security camera.
"These events really do take some of the tension," he said.
"People like ourselves, we know we have a house only because we have monitoring systems. We have a cottage, we don't know. And there's a lot of people that actually know that they've lost all of their possessions, perhaps."
Lyons says people from Flin Flon are sticking together through events like the gathering in Assoiniboine Park.
"I think it helps with the sense of community, we are hoping that everybody can manage somehow to rebuild ... so that we don't lose a lot of our friends and community members as a result of this disaster. And I am hoping it will, in many ways, make your community stronger as well."
Cool weather, rain help fire fight
Wildfires in Manitoba have pushed about 21,000 people out of their homes, prompting provincial officials to ask travellers to stay away to free up hotel space. The largest fire, near Flin Flon and Sherridon, is approximately 307,781 hectares and remains out of control.
According to Environment Canada, Flin Flon got 2 mm of rain over the weekend, while other parts of Manitoba got upwards of 20 mm.
Flin Flon Mayor George Fontaine says the cooler weather and rain helped their firefighting efforts and so far the city has not lost any structures.
"Today is more of a monitoring day than a fighting day. Things have calmed down a little bit. People are still doing their firefighting. Everybody's organized," Fontaine said.
Fontaine says fire crews know there will be flare ups in the days ahead and are preparing.
"They are ready to jump when the action is needed," he said.
If the situation remains stable, they may start talking about return plans sometime next week, Fontaine said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
This Christian studies teacher found a new balance, embracing himself as gay and Catholic
From the outside, Erwin Ottenbreit looked like a traditional Catholic high school teacher. He taught Christian ethics in Regina, was married to the same woman for more than 25 years and raised three children. "Things started changing, I think, late in the marriage," he told CBC's This is Saskatchewan podcast in its latest episode. "It was a feeling that something wasn't right. Something was lacking in my life." That something, he came to realize, was a growing distance in his marriage as he started questioning his identity and accepting he was attracted to men. His wife was the first person he told. While she was initially shocked, Ottenbriet said that first conversation lifted a weight off his shoulders. "There was a huge upheaval in our lives for sure," he said. That was nearly 20 years ago. Since then, the family has had time to adjust and preserve their relationships with one another. His ex-wife even attended his wedding to a man. Ottenbreit has reflected on his faith and how it's changed. "I'm thinking of all of the things that I used to teach as a Christian ethics teacher, as a Catholic educator, and I wasn't able to live my authentic self while I was in that role," he said. "Hearing some of the comments about same-sex attraction being an abomination was just something that I couldn't reconcile with myself." WATCH | Is it possible to be gay and Catholic? Is it possible to be gay and Catholic? 2 hours ago Duration 3:42 Erwin Ottenbreit has come to embrace his sexual identity as a gay man, but doing so forced him to leave his marriage and revisit his relationship with the Catholic Church. Ottenbriet still considers himself Catholic. He grew up in the church and the traditions have comprised a big part of his life. "For me to sort of abandon that is something that I'm just not willing to do," he said. He's thankful the Catholic church under Pope Francis became less rigid in its attitude toward homosexuality. "I want to be a part of that evolution with them, thinking that as a gay Catholic, I can maybe have a role in others seeing that we're as faithful Catholics as anyone else." In fact, it was a conference for Catholic educators in Anaheim, Calif., that brought Ottenbreit together with his now-husband David Yaranon. Yaranon knew he was gay much earlier than Ottenbreit, but said his relationship with the church was strengthened by finding a parish in Santa Monica, Calif., that opens the service with its priest welcoming members of the LGBTQ+ community, those who are divorced and those who may not be traditionally affiliated with the Catholic church. Ottenbriet was stunned by that greeting when he attended. "My mouth was wide open. I'd never heard that ever in any church. So it was like I had found my place." The couple has yet to find a Catholic church in Regina with the same atmosphere. "The Catholic church, there are good parts to it — and that's what I hold onto," Yaranon said. "The messaging of the love and inclusiveness that's supposed to be happening in the church. I think that's what I liked about St. Monica's … I wish more churches were like that." Both Ottenbreit and Yaranon want fellow Catholics who are struggling with their gender or sexual identity to know there are people who accept and love them, and who are fighting to get the church to open its arms to them. "I think that's why I continue to stay Catholic, knowing that there are the LGBTQ+ community out there that will fight for the cause of inclusivity within the church," Ottenbreit said. "That's what gives me hope."


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Canadian teen Summer McIntosh shatters third world swim record in five days
The Shopping Trends team is independent of the journalists at CTV News. We may earn a commission when you use our links to shop. Read about us.


CBC
6 hours ago
- CBC
#TheMoment a N.S fisherman spotted a pod of orcas
Lobster fisherman Bernie Lamey recalls the 'once in a lifetime' moment he was approached by more than a dozen orcas off the coast of Cape Smokey, N.S.