Mild weather threatens ice road safety, says MKO grand chief - Action News
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Manitoba

Mild weather threatens ice road safety, says MKO grand chief

Manitobas mild weather is wreaking havoc on northern ice roads in the province. Sheila North Wilson, grand chief of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, says the ice road season started late and appears to be ending early.

El Nino responsible for above-average winter temperatures across Manitoba

Ice roads in Manitoba are at risk after a short, mild winter, says MKO Grand Chief Sheila North Wilson. (TCWR Joint Venture)

Manitoba's mild weather is wreaking havoc on northern ice roads in the province.

Sheila North Wilson, grand chief of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, says the ice road season started late and appears to be ending early.

"Community members and leaders are finding that the ice is not as thick, so the loads have to be lighter," she said.

"I don'tthink people that have never had to rely on winter roads can truly understand what it's like and hope for weather to co-operate."

The 14 First Nations in the MKO region rely on temporaryice roads for supplies, she said.

During mostwinters, isolated communities thatare only accessible by plane in warmer weather canconnect with urban areas by car.

Building supplies, new vehiclesand food are all brought into isolated communities on winter roads,North Wilson said. Local stores are expensive in the north, so ice roads allow families to buy cheaply in bulk, she said.

"It gives a chance for individual families to go and get what they need," said North Wilson, who added much of the food purchased in the winter is meant to last a full year.

The ice roads also givefamilies thechance to go on a vacation and access recreation areas they'd otherwise be separated from, she said.

"Sometimes families come out on these roads to urban areas as a whole family, because it's simply not affordable to fly," North Wilson said.

When winters are normal and cold, ice roads are perfectly safe, she said. But astemperatures rise as they did this winterthe roadways becomedangerous and unpredictable. It's unfortunate people in northern communities have to traverse thinning ice roads to get essential supplies home, said North Wilson.

"When the thaw starts to happen and people are still needing to get their supplies in, people take a little bit more risk," she said.

This risk could be mitigatedif permanent roads were built to service all Manitobacommunities, she said.

Airship transportation is the answer, says prof

North Wilson's wish may not be economically sound, according to a University of Manitoba professor.

Building all-seasonroads to every remote communitywould take decades and billions of dollars, said supply change management professor,Barry Prentice.

He is working with engineers and Winnipeg pilot Dale George to develop an ultralight airship that would transport goods to northern Manitobaas well as to residents in Ontario, Saskatchewan, and the Northwest Territories.

"We're convinced that the airships are really the only solution that is practical and economic," said Prentice. He estimates the cost of developing the airship is roughly $50 million.

A test flightof the airship wasplanned in October but the team ran into an issue fitting the vessel through the storage hangardoors, said Prentice. The ship's first test flight is now scheduled for the spring.