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Manitoba

Lake St. Martin flood evacuees demand answers

Members of the Lake St. Martin First Nation, who have been flooded out for 1 years, are continuing to pressure the provincial and federal governments to let them go home.

Flooded-out Manitoba First Nation members say they want to go home

Lake St. Martin flood evacuees rally

12 years ago
Duration 1:54
Members of the Lake St. Martin First Nation, who have been out of their homes for a year and a half due to flooding, are demanding answers from government on when they can return home.

Members of the Lake St. Martin First Nation, who have been flooded out for 1years, are continuing to pressure the provincial and federal governments to let them go home.

About 25 flood evacuees and others gathered outside the Manitoba legislature on Monday todemand answers from both levels of government.

They are among the roughly 2,000 people from six Manitoba First Nations who are still out of their homes after flooding extensively damaged their home communities in May 2011.

Many of the evacuees have been put up in Winnipeg hotels.

The evacuees say they are being stonewalled in their search for new places to live, and some say they've given up hope that they'll be home for Christmas.

"Christmas is coming and this is going to be the second year being out here in Winnipeg," Cherie Thompson, whose family has not been home since April 2011, told CBC News.

Thompson said she and her husband are renting a house in Winnipeg, and their six children are enrolled in schools in the city, but she added that life has been difficult away from their home reserve.

"Every day with six children, it hurts, and a lot of timesI wish I could be at home," she said.

Lake St. Martin Chief Chief Adrian Sinclair says his members have their eye on a new site, but are being pressured toaccept an old military basethat isn't suitable.

The province hascreated a temporary village a decommissioned military radar base near Gypsumville off Highway 6, while arrangements continue to find a permanent location for theFirst Nation members.

But only a handful of band members have moved into thetemporary site near Gypsumville, and most have been demanding another location for a new community.

Lake St. Martin resident Myrle Ballard told The Canadian Press that her community is paying a heavy price because it was artificially flooded by water diverted from Winnipeg and other larger centres.

Thompson and other flood evacuees say they are hoping to get some answers from the province on Tuesday about when they can return home and start rebuilding.

With files from The Canadian Press