Fort McMurray is 'still alive,' fire chief says but safety concerns linger - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:01 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Fort McMurray is 'still alive,' fire chief says but safety concerns linger

Albertas premier says Fort McMurray will rebuild after 2,400 structures were damaged or destroyed by a powerful wildfire but Rachel Notley was also quick to caution people to stay away from the city, which is still dealing with hot spots, power outages and the wreckage and devastation brought on by the blaze.

'This is rewriting the book on the way a fire moves, on the way a fire behaves,' Darby Allen says

Inside Fort McMurray

8 years ago
Duration 2:37
Members of the media boarded a bus and were escorted by emergency vehicles into the fire-ravaged city

On the eastern bank of the Clearwater River, the battleto save downtown Fort McMurray raged for 12 solid hours.

In the end, the wildfire burned to the water'sedge. And there, firefighters won perhaps their most significant victory in a long and heartbreaking campaign to save as much as possible of Alberta's oilsands city.

"The firewas stopped there," Fire Chief Darby Allen said, as he pointed to the charred trees on the steep riverbank during a tour through the city on Monday afternoon. "If that fire had got down into the downtown, we would have lost the downtown."

Allen has led the ground war against the massive wildfire that forced tens of thousands of people from their homes last week. On Monday, he led abus tour through the streets of the city. He was joined by Premier Rachel Notley, and Mayor Melissa Blake, and members of the media from across Canada and from other countries.

"The city was surrounded by an ocean of fire only a few days ago,"Notleysaid at a news conference after the tour. "But FortMcMurrayand the surrounding communities have been saved. And they will be rebuilt."

On its waythroughthe city, thebus followed, as closely as possible, the route the fire took as it swept into the city last Tuesday.The tour served as a stark reminder of just how powerful a wildfire tearingthroughtinder-dry forest can be, and how powerless human beings can be to stop it.

Earlyin the tour, the bus drove past Beacon Hill on the south side of the city, one of the first residential areas to burn after the fire leapt the Highway 63. Once a neighbourhood with about 700 homes, there is little left now butash and charred cement.

"At those stages we were depleted by manpower," Allen said. "We were depleted by water shortage. And we made a decision early to retreat and start in again where we could fight the fight."

A burnt out van is pictured in the Beacon Hill neighbourhood during a media tour of the fire-damaged city of Fort McMurray, Alta. Premier Rachel Notley says the city 'will emerge from this emergency with real structural resiliency with most of its critical infrastructure saved.' (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

After a trip through the downtown, the busclimbed a hillinto theAbasandneighbourhood.

On street after street, where homes oncestood, where children once played, where big shiny pickup trucks were once lined up in the driveways, there was nothing but rubble. Cement foundations,blackened fridges and stoves, the burned hulks of cars andtrucks with the glass and tires melted away.

'I've never seen anything like this'

In all, about 2,400 homes and buildings burned in the fire, either completely or partly destroyed. But there were many victories as well.Firefighters saved about 25,000 buildings, which is believed to be 85 to 90per cent of the city.

"FortMcMurrayis still alive," said Allen, who knows this fire as well as anyone, and often refers to it as "abeast" or "an animal.

A police officer looks at the wildfire destruction in the Abasands neighbourhood. The premier says the city will rebuild, but is urging people to stay away for now. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

"I've never seen anything like this," he said. "I've spoken to my forestry colleagues and they have never seen anything like this. This is rewriting the book on the way a fire moves, on the way a fire behaves."

Notleycalled the tour "quite overwhelming," and said she was struck by the sight of burned homes that sat so close to others untouched by the flames

"It reinforced to me how much work and how much success was achieved over the last few days by those heroic firefighters," she said.

All Albertans, the premiersaid, are incredibly grateful to the men and women who saved the city.

People urged to stay away

Notley again emphasized that Fort McMurrayis a long way from being habitable. There are large portions of the city that have no electricity, no gas, no water.

"First responders and repair crews have weeks of work ahead of them to make the city safe," she said. "I'm advised that we will be able to provide a schedule for return within two weeks."

So it will be that long, at least, before residents who did not lose their homes will have a clear idea of when they can return to them.

The fire now covers204,000 hectares and is growing more slowly than it was over the weekend and last week. It is still some25 to 30 kilometres from the Saskatchewanborder.

About 700 firefightersareon the scene, with another 300 on the way.

The Suncoroilsands plant 30 km north of the city remains secure, Notley said.

After a tour of her near-emptycity, Blake said Fort McMurray'scritical infrastructure remains intact and more than 1,500 people are already working to make the city liveable again.

Allen then took his turnbefore the microphone, drew a deep breath and blew it out.

"I trulybelieve nothing else could have been done that wasn't doneto protect the people and the structures within our city," he said.

He offered three examples of the heroes who fought to save as much of the city as possible. One was a localfirefighter who found himself fighting, along with his crew,to savehis own house.

"They lost his home," Allen said. "He didn't drop his nozzle. He moved to his neighbour's house and continued to fight that fire. And he fought that fire for a further 22 hours before he just couldn't stand anymore."

The burnt remains of a barbecue are pictured in the Beacon Hill neighbourhood. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

He mentioned Dale Bendfeld,acting director of community services and policing for the municipality. Allen said one night last week, the fire suddenlymade a surge toward the small town of Anzac, south of Fort McMurray.

"With a couple of peopleand a flashlight, and making some phone calls, he evacuated 450 people in two hours. That is true heroism, ladies and gentlemen."

Get breaking news alerts on this story and others. Download the CBC News app for iOS and Android.