Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Frozen In Time:' Fort Mcmurray Residents Brace For Return To City

The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2016 11:17 AM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Henry Velasquez wants to return to the place where his home once stood — someday, but not yet.
     
    Residents are being allowed to return in stages this week, a month after a voracious wildfire destroyed 10 per cent of Fort McMurray in northern Alberta and forced the evacuation of the entire city.
     
    But Velasquez, a chemical engineer, will be hanging back in Calgary with his wife, Olga, and son Tomas, 3.
     
    He's just not ready for the emotional punch of seeing what's left of their townhouse in the Stone Creek neighbourhood at the north end of town.
     
    In July or August, he'll re-evaluate, he said.
     
    "I just want to go there before they start the demolition of everything, because I just want to see where my house is, see if there is at least one memory that I could rescue from what we have," he said through tears.  
     
    "The most simple, the most small thing that I could recover from that, it will be such a treasure for me and my wife."
     
    In Ian Seggie's apartment in the Timberlea neighbourhood, there's still a bag of trash waiting to be taken out and a pot of soup ready to be heated on the stove.
     
     
    "The eerie part for me is that everything is frozen in time," he said from Calgary, where he's been staying since May 3, when more than 80,000 people were ordered out of the city.
     
    Officials have warned returning residents that it won't be business as usual in Fort McMurray. They've been advised to bring with them two weeks worth of food, water and prescription medication as crews continue to work to get basic services restored.
     
    Seggie made arrangements with an Edmonton grocery store to have perishable food pre-frozen. He plans to pick it up on his way to Fort McMurray and load it into coolers.
     
    He doesn't know whether he'll stay once he goes up on Thursday.  
     
    "If the air quality goes to crap, I'm not sticking around," he said. "I need to get back and get my place dealt with, just to have a look and search things out. And if I stay, I stay."
     
     
    Kevin Lewis is anxious to get back into his apartment in Thickwood, a relatively undamaged neighbourhood that's slated to reopen on Friday.  
     
    Lewis has been unable to run his transportation brokerage business since the evacuation and he figures he's lost some $40,000 over the last month.
     
    "I definitely need to get to work," Lewis said from Lac La Biche, Alta., a small town about 2 1/2 hours southeast of Fort McMurray that's taken in thousands of evacuees.
     
    Lewis knows it's a possibility that smoke damage may have rendered his place uninhabitable.
     
    "If it's not really livable there yet, I could at least be able to grab my computers and I'll be able to work."
     
    Jim Mandeville, senior project manager with Mississauga-based FirstOnSite Restoration, has been in Fort McMurray since May 8 to help critical businesses such as banks, grocery stores and pharmacies get running again.
     
     
    Dozens of FirstOnSite workers have been working long days disposing of spoiled food, cleaning ventilation systems and removing smoky odours from upholstery and carpets.
     
    Mandeville said provincial and municipal officials aren't underplaying how challenging it will be for residents to return.
     
    "When they say to bring 14 days worth of food and water, they mean it. And when they say people with respiratory conditions shouldn't come up here, they mean it — and they have a really good reason why," he said.
     
    "It is not a clean, safe, normal environment that you're walking into."
     
     
    NOT EVERYTHING WILL BE FULLY OPERATING WHEN FORT MCMURRAY REOPENS TO RESIDENTS
     
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Officials have warned that residents of Fort McMurray in northern Alberta should not expect the fire-damaged city to be running normally when they begin to return on Wednesday. Here is what they can anticipate:
     
     
    Health Care: The Northern Lights Regional Heath Centre, the city's only hospital, is not expected to return to full operations until after June 21. Its emergency department is to be open this week and some limited services are to be available in the beginning days of the re-entry. A temporary urgent care centre has been set up outside the Syncrude Sport and Wellness Centre.
     
    Schools: Classes are to resume in September. Students can finish their school year in communities where they have been staying since the evacuation.
     
     
    Waste disposal: Normal residential garbage collection is to resume June 16 and temporary transfer stations are to be available beginning June 2.
     
    Airport: Commercial air service to Fort McMurray International Airport is tentatively scheduled to resume June 10.
     
    Stores: Crews have been working to get critical businesses such as banks, grocery stores and pharmacies running again. Supplies of some items may be limited in the beginning and the government says some things may need to be rationed.
     
     
    FORT MCMURRAY RE-ENTRY: WHAT DO RETURNING RESIDENTS NEED TO BRING?
     
     
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Wildfire evacuees will be allowed to start returning to Fort McMurray on Wednesday, about a month after a huge wildfire forced more than 80,000 residents to flee. Officials have warned it won't be business as usual for a while. Here's what returning residents have been advised to bring with them:
     
    — Enough food, drinking water and prescription medication to last up to 14 days. A boil-water advisory continues to be in effect and stores are still being cleaned up and restocked.
     
    — N-95 dust masks to reduce smoke exposure. The masks are available at hardware stores and one per household will be included in the Canadian Red Cross cleaning kits available at information centres.
     
    — Appropriate clothing, including boots, long pants, a long-sleeved shirt and gloves.
     
    — A camera to document any damage for insurance purposes.
     
    — A flashlight, as some homes may not have power.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Healthy Lifestyle Key To Cut Breast Cancer Gene Risk

    According to researchers, breast cancer remains the most common form of malignancy diagnosed in women in developed countries.

    Healthy Lifestyle Key To Cut Breast Cancer Gene Risk

    Bell To Pay $11.82m In Rebates After Competition Bureau's Text Messaging Investigation

    Bell To Pay $11.82m In Rebates After Competition Bureau's Text Messaging Investigation
    This marks the highest amount of money obtained for consumer rebates under a Competition Bureau agreement to date.

    Bell To Pay $11.82m In Rebates After Competition Bureau's Text Messaging Investigation

    Remains Of Missing British Hiker Found In Cypress Provincial Park

    Remains Of Missing British Hiker Found In Cypress Provincial Park
      The 22-year-old man visited Vancouver as part of an eight-week tour of North America and Vancouver Police say he was last seen in the city on Nov. 25, 2013.

    Remains Of Missing British Hiker Found In Cypress Provincial Park

    Have You Seen Jastinder Athwal From North Vancouver?

    Have You Seen Jastinder Athwal From North Vancouver?
    All inquiries and searches have failed to locate Jastinder. 

    Have You Seen Jastinder Athwal From North Vancouver?

    LRT South of the Fraser Advances Toward Development After Province Pledges Transit Funding

    Light Rail Transit (LRT) South of the Fraser may be one step closer to reality after today’s announcement by the Government of British Columbia to pledge $246 million for transit improvements in Metro Vancouver over three years. Included in this funding is support for initial work towards the new 27-km LRT system, which will help build and connect communities south of the Fraser.

    LRT South of the Fraser Advances Toward Development After Province Pledges Transit Funding

    Children's Advocate Wants Domestic Violence Included In Child Protection Act

    Darlene MacDonald says there is a growing recognition that witnessing domestic violence is traumatic for children.

    Children's Advocate Wants Domestic Violence Included In Child Protection Act