Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fort McMurray Funeral Home Staff Hauled Body, Cremated Remains During Evacuation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2016 01:08 PM
    As residents of Fort McMurray snatched up key belongings before fleeing their homes last week, employees at the northern Alberta community's lone funeral home packed a more "precious" cargo.
     
    The evacuation order that displaced some 80,000 people came days before a scheduled funeral service, and staff at the Robert Anderson Funeral Home had to safeguard the deceased's body, the company's funeral director said.
     
    "We were part of the evacuees, we were in the lineups, we just happened to have had a deceased with us on the route to Edmonton," Andrew Montgomery told The Canadian Press in a telephone interview.
     
    "Obviously, we have precious cargo and we just take every precaution that we can," he said. "We were more than ready to go. We had files packed up, cremated remains packed up and we've got them all in safe storage here in Edmonton."
     
    The body was placed on a stretcher and transported in a removal van. 
     
    "We just...did what we had to do," Montgomery said. In those situations, he said, "We've just got to think of things really quickly."
     
    Asked if he was stressed to shoulder such responsibility at a time of crisis, Montgomery said: "It makes you forget about your own problems."
     
     
    "You just go into this mode, it's a little bit crazy," he said.
     
    A funeral home in Edmonton has agreed to "house the body for us in a controlled environment" until the service, which is to be held in the city later this week.
     
    The company has been talking with family members about arrangements, he said.
     
    The man's daughter had previously posted on Facebook that the service would be postponed until further notice.
     
    The funeral home has set up shop temporarily in Edmonton until it can return to Fort McMurray.
     
    Satellite images suggest the funeral home is "still intact," Montgomery said, but it's unclear when it will be able to operate.
     
    All three staff members are doing well so far and it appears their homes have been spared, he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records
    The application to intervene, which requires court approval to proceed, will likely be filed in the summer once Vice Media has filed its appeal documents, Andrea Gonsalves said.

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims
    RCMP say the 60-year-old man entered the pleas in Bathurst provincial court on Wednesday.

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims

    WestJet Planes Used To Fly Fort Mcmurray Hospital Patients To Edmonton

    Nurse Sherrie Whiffen says staff at the Northern Lights Regional Health Centre in Fort McMurray practice evacuating the hospital every year, but she never had to do the real thing until Tuesday night.

    WestJet Planes Used To Fly Fort Mcmurray Hospital Patients To Edmonton

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post
    Privatization of Canada Post — in whole or in part — is not on the table, Public Services Minister Judy Foote said.

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post

    Nova Scotia's $700 Jaywalking Fine Could Be Part Of Wider Review: Minister

    The Nova Scotia government is pondering a delay in implementing a controversial pedestrian fine for jaywalking included in legislation passed last fall.

    Nova Scotia's $700 Jaywalking Fine Could Be Part Of Wider Review: Minister

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict
    Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher says he does not understand how conflict commissioner Paul Fraser can conclude that money paid to the premier is only a political benefit, not a private financial perk.

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict