Documents reveal questions and confusion among officials during Yellowknife's 2023 wildfire evacuation - Action News
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Documents reveal questions and confusion among officials during Yellowknife's 2023 wildfire evacuation

Internal government emails and briefing notes, obtained CBC News, reveal some of the confusion and turmoil around last summer's wildfire evacuation in Yellowknife.

Emails show scramble to find accommodations for evacuees, and how hospital E.R. almost closed

People in camouflage play guitars in a hangar, surrounded by people in wheelchairs.
Members of 440 Transport Squadron entertain people awaiting evacuation from Yellowknife on Aug. 17, 2023. (Sailor 1st Class Patrice Harvey/Canadian Armed Forces)

On Aug. 16,2023, about 40 minutes before the N.W.T. government issued an evacuation order for Yellowknife due to threatening wildfires, a director with the city emailed the territorial governmentaskingfor basic details on where evacuees should go and who they could contact for assistance.

Those questions, which weren't immediately answered at the time, revealsome of the confusion and rushed decision-makingthat marked the mass evacuation of the majority of the territory last summer.

The co-ordination between theN.W.T. government, City of Yellowknife, federal government and Canadian Armed Forces is captured in emails and briefing notesCBC News obtained through an Access to Information and Protection of Privacy request.

The documents showthe manyissues faced by officials as they dealtwith theunprecedented emergency, including the scramble to find accommodation for evacuees, the local hospital emergency room's near-closurefrom a lack of staff,and how a groupmay have been planning to cut in line for the evacuation flights.

Mayor Rebecca Alty stands in City Hall chambers wearing a striped shirt.
Mayor Rebecca Alty called on the federal government to provide quicker support to Yellowknife during the evacuation. (Graham Shishkov/CBC)

'We can't let government bureaucracy weigh us down'

At around 8:30 p.m. on the daybefore Yellowknife's evacuation order was issued, the city manager who was then Sheila Bassi-Kellett sent an email to the territorial government to formally request support,includingresourcesfor sheltering in place "given NTHSSA [Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority]confirmed it is not able to support."

"The city does not have the capacity to provide the social supports that are the mandate of [Health and Social Services] to do in an emergency situation," the email reads.

She also asked for support in the event of a cityevacuation, which "may be a reality."The evacuation order went out the following day.

The day after the order was issued, Aug.17,Mayor Rebecca Altyreached out to Bill Blair, federal minister of national defence, to urgeCanadato provide more resources for the city to coordinate the mass evacuation. Altysaid the city needed immediate help with the logistics of getting people onto evacuation flights.

"I'm hoping that youand [N.W.T.] Minister [Shane] Thompson will be able to work together to quickly mobilize some folks to come and provide support to get evacuees registered and sent out on flights asap. We can't let government bureaucracy weigh us down in this time," Alty wrote.

Alty also contactedthe territorial government, calling for more urgent action to getpeople out of the evacuation zone.

"Based on MinisterBlair's comments, the military can get an airlift operation underway within two hours of him giving the order. Will you be requesting this right now? We need this," she wrote.

"The fire is anticipated to reach our boundary by Saturday. We can't be pushing flights to continue on Friday and Saturday. We need the military now. Your staff have been working hard, but as you've noted, your crews are skeleton crews. Why wait?"

Evacuees from Yellowknife, many of whom have driven all night, head into the evacuation centre in northern Alberta.
Evacuees from Yellowknife, many of whom had driven all night, head into an evacuation centre in High Level, Alta., on Aug. 17, 2023. (Kory Siegers/CBC)

Evacuation centres reaching capacity

Other N.W.T. communities had been evacuated in the days before Yellowknife's order was issued, and municipalities in Alberta were already struggling to keep up with the influx of evacuees.Thatcomplicated evacuation flights out of Hay River on Aug.15.

"Alberta has indicated that they can't accept this volume of evacuees until a new host location is identified so we would need to confirm with them before sending," reads an internal email from one N.W.T. official.

Other emails sent between officials on Aug.15 detailed that Wood Buffalowas at capacity which further complicated evacuations.

"We won't be able to arrange new flights until an alternate reception centre is established with [Alberta]," wrote another official with the territorial government.

What stores are open?

There was also confusion around what necessities would be available to essential workers who remained in Yellowknife after the evacuation.

On Aug. 17,an internal email from a city official in Yellowknifepointed out logistical issues around provisions for contractors building the firebreaks around the city.

"We are working with the private sector contractors building the [firebreaks] and doing heavy equipment work. They need confirmation that there will be [the] ability to provision their workers," the email reads.

The city asked what stores would remain open and told the territorial government to keep those businesses in the loop with future information.

"You have to include Rochdi's Independent in your planning as well. We have reached out to them already, and they were supplying us last night because we needed food for the contractors who are building the firebreaks who were working overnight."

In a separate email on Aug. 18, a city official wrote that the territory needed to ensure there was enough fuel and support.

"I understand there are many pockets of essential personnel who are not aware of any logistical support and are in need of it. We've taken care of contractors but others are adrift. This has got to be a top priority," the city official wrote.

A large orange building.
Stanton Territorial Hospital in Yellowknife in 2021. There was concern the hospital didn't have resources to provide care to essential workers during Yellowknife's evacuation. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

Hospital E.R.nearly closed

The territory was also facing other logistical issues, including the possibleclosure of the Stanton Territorial Hospital emergency room because of staffing.On Aug.17, territorial officials made a desperate plea tothe federal government forhelp.

In one email, an N.W.T. officialrequested a humanitarian andtrauma field hospital be deployed to Yellowknife "as soon as possible for an initial period of two weeks with possibility of extension.

"This is needed very urgently as Stanton has indicated they plan to shut down tomorrow, and fire fighting operations required here cannot continue without trauma support available," the email reads.

In another email to federal ministers, an N.W.T. government officialasked that their requests be"fast tracked," as"our response to the fire approaching Yellowknife is critical."

Ultimately, the federal government denied the request for a field hospital after a discussion with Northwest Territories Health and Social Services leadership, including CEO Kim Riles.

"They assured me that plans are currently in place at Stanton to ensure continuity of medical services," the email from the federal government said.

A line up of people on the street.
A line of people at Sir John Franklin High School, stretching down 49th Street, waiting to get on evacuation flights out of Yellowknife last August. (Francis Tessier-Burns/CBC)

Group ofevacuees planned to skip the line for flights

Emails from military personnel also reveal challengeswith getting people on evacuation flights in an orderly manner.

One email described howa groupwasplanning to show up to the evacuation flight gathering spot with the intention of cutting in line.

"They are seeking to be prioritized and jump the queue to get on the next flight," the military personnel memberwrote.

"This does not sound right and we suspect it will cause some distress of those already in the queue."

In another email, a military personnel with Joint Task Force North wrote that the staff needed to have messaging explaining that everyone who wanted to get on an evacuation flight wouldbe given a spot and there was no need to rush the line.

There was no update on what happened with the incident.