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Montreal

Clova, Que., the small town Premier Legault said was burning to the ground, still standing for now

Meggy Richard's phone has been ringing off the hook since Quebec Premier Franois Legault said on live television that the province was letting the small hamlet she lives in burn to the ground.

Wind change spares hamlet but ground crews may be pulled back for their safety

A man in a suit points to a map divide in red, yellow and green, according to wildifre risk.
Quebec Premier Franois Legault points to the small village of Clova on a map of wildfires Monday. Legault pre-emptively told journalists Clova had been left to burn, though teams were still on the ground fighting a nearby fire. (Sylvain Roy Roussel/CBC)

MeggieRichard's phone has been ringing off the hook since Quebec Premier Franois Legault said on live television that the province was letting the small hamlet she lives in burn to the ground.

"Everyone's going crazy," said Richard, who has lived in Clovaa village of three dozen year-roundresidents 500 kilometres north of Montrealfor 17 years and owns the village's only restaurant and corner store.

"The phones won't stop ringing. I've got my two cellphones, plus the home phone," Richard said, cutting the conversation short because she was getting a call on the other line. She said Clova residents who had decampedover the weekend were worried about the premier's comments.

Richard, who stayed behind,said her partner has been assisting firefighters in battling a blaze about three kilometres north of the town and that, contrary to what the premier said,"everything seems to be going well."

Shortly before CBC News spoke with Richard,Legault said in a news conference Monday afternoon thatit was unfortunate but that due to an out-of-control fire, the Quebec forest fire agency, SOPFEU, had had to let Clova burn. Richard, who had not watchedLegault's address,said she hadn't heard anything of the like from local officials or firefighting teams on the ground.

"It happens, but this weekend we managed to avoid the worst in the big municipalities, but there is a small municipality of Clova that unfortunately we were not able to save," Legault said.

The wildfire situation in Quebec worsened under dry conditions in many areas over the weekend, notably in theprovince's northwestern Abitibi-Tmiscamingue region, where out-of-controlfires near the municipalities of Lebel-sur-Quvillon and Normtal have forced thousands of people out of their homes. Officials are worried about a lack of rain forecast for the region.

"We're in a difficult situation," Legault said. "We're probably in it for the summer before everything is put out and for the forest to stop burning everywhere."

The province is seeing an unprecedented number of fires burning at once, at more than 150, though SOPFEU only has the resources to battle about 30 at a time. The agency's website showed a tally of 112 out-of-control fires.

Before the news conference in Quebec City Monday, Legault had invited journalists to film and take photos of him in a meeting room with Public Security Ministry and SOPFEU officials. Sitting at the table, he'd made a passing remark that"sadly for Clova, we've lost control, we're going to have to let Clova burn."

In response to CBC's request for clarification, Legault's press attachsimply sent a smartphone screenshotof a SOPFEU Facebook update on Clova, published after the premier's comments.

The statement said a fire near Clova had exceeded the agency's air tanker capacities, but that ground crews were working to hold the fire back from the town. "That said, the situation is critical and SOPFEU may eventually have to pull its teams out for their safety."

But Richard and another confused resident CBC spoke with, who also stayed behind after the evacuation,said no one had described the situation as critical to them and that it had in fact improved since Friday. Richard said she had heard of some cottagesin the area burning, but didn't know how many.

Despite its small population, Clova attracts hundreds of hunting and fishing enthusiasts who have cottagesor stay at one of its many commercial camps.

A photo from a high industrial building overlooks a pulp mill and a wildfire generating a huge plume of smoke above the forest in the distance.
A fire is seen near the Nordic Kraft pulp mill in Lebel-sur-Quvillon. (Submitted by Chantiers Chibougamau)

Concern overAbitibi-Tmiscamingue region

Karine Pelletier,a SOPFEUspokesperson reached by a reporter after Legault's remarks, said the village appeared to be in a better position since winds had recently changed direction.

Pelletierdidsay, though, that if the fires began approaching Clova once again and that Lebel-sur-Quvillonwas also under threat at the same time, the agency would have to prioritizeLebel-sur-Quvillonbecause it has a larger population and apulp-and-paper plantwith dangerous chemicals.

The roughly 2,000 residents of Lebel-sur-Quvillon were ordered to evacuate Friday evening.

However, in an update Monday evening, SOPFEUsaid ground crews had been ordered to leave Lebel-sur-Quvillonfor their safety and due tothe fires'extreme danger and intensity.

They had been there working to secure the town and had builta fire guard around the lake and installed sprinklers.Water bombers are now working to control the two fires burning near the town.

Fires across the province have affected200,000 hectares asoverwhelmed firefighting teams struggle to keep up.

More than 10,000 people across the province have had to flee their homes due to the wildfires, which worsened significantly late last week.

Clova is part of the larger city of La Tuque, about 300 kilometres southeast of it. In a post to his professional Facebook page City Councillor ric Chagnonsaid it was"completely false" that Clova had been left to burn.

"I just came back from there," Chagnon wrote, referring to Clova. "How can you announce such news to residents and vacationers who are going through this situation!There are people on site who are working hard to fight the flames and who are putting all their effort into it!"

Pierre Thibodeau, the other resident reached by CBC, was confused when asked whether his town had burned or was inimminent threat of burning.

"We're not scared," Thibodeau said, adding there was a team of SOPFEU firefighters operating out of the town and that there were two large Hydro-Qubec lines nearby supplying electricity to Quebec City and Montreal.

Thibodeau and his wife were ordered to evacuate over the weekend and briefly stayed at a friend's hunting cabin 15 kilometres away but he said they returned to Clova yesterday, after it was clear to them the community was no longer in danger.

He said he and his wife were one of about five or six families who stayed in the area after the evacuation order, but that they would leave if things got worse.

WATCH| Here's why there are so many out-of-control forest fires in Quebec:

What's behind Quebec's 'unprecedented' forest fire season?

1 year ago
Duration 2:01
CBC's Steve Rukavina explains why so many fires are burning, many out of control, in the province this spring.