Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rachel Notley Gets Kudos On Fort McMurray Fire Handling, But Hard Work Just Beginning

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2016 11:40 AM
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is getting high marks for leadership in handling the Fort McMurray wildfire crisis, but political observers say the disaster remains a dicey political proposition with limited upside and a lot of downside.
     
    Political scientist Duane Bratt says the process of getting people back into their homes and getting aid and reconstruction money will tell the tale on how Notley will be remembered in the long term for her handling of the crisis.
     
    "On the political side … if you handle it well, it's a short term blip," said Bratt, a political scientist with Mount Royal University in Calgary. "If you screw it up, it never goes away."
     
    About 80,000 evacuees are to return on June 1 to Fort McMurray, almost a month after a raging blaze broke through the firelines and destroyed 2,400 structures, most of them houses.
     
    Since then Notley has become the face and focus of efforts to contain the blaze, save the city, and get it back on its feet.
     
    She has given almost daily updates for three weeks.
     
    It's been an organizational challenge orchestrated on the fly on multiple tracks: getting the evacuees out and fire crews in, securing the area from looting, and finding temporary homes for the displaced in Lac la Biche, Edmonton and beyond.
     
     
    Preloaded debit cards were being handed out a week after the evacuation.
     
    Notley met with oilsands officials to consult and calm concerns about production. She toured the city twice, once with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and afterward received Trudeau's pledge to expand employment insurance coverage.
     
    There was benefit to be derived from the past experiences of major disasters in the province — a wildfire that destroyed a third of Slave Lake in 2011 and massive flooding that displaced thousands in Calgary and southern Alberta in 2013.
     
    "She's handled this as well as can be expected," said Bratt. "Had any of that had gone wrong she would've taken the blame, so she gets the credit here as well."
     
    Bratt said the evacuation itself was a masterstroke, with more than 80,000 people successfully getting out on the one north-south road out of the city.
     
    Notley has also been credited for her work with her political rival, Opposition Leader Brian Jean of the Wildrose party. Jean, who represents Fort McMurray in the legislature member, saw his own home destroyed in the fire.
     
     
    Both Bratt and Calgary-based pollster Janet Brown agree Jean has done an admirable job, pushing Notley and her government on their fire-fighting and reconstruction efforts and on personifying the impact of the disaster.
     
    "For those Albertans that actually don't know anyone in Fort Mac, they know Brian Jean and they know his story," said Brown.
     
    "He wouldn't take a room in a refugee centre and he wouldn't take a hotel room. Through it all, he's still putting his constituents first."
     
    Both Notley and Jean have been credited for working together in the crisis, but Brown said that will inevitably change as the crisis moves into reimbursement, insurance and rebuilding.
     
    "As difficult as this situation has been, there haven't been a lot of hard choices," said Brown. "You just do what needs to be done.
     
    "As we get further and further along, the choices will get harder. It will be harder to please everybody. It will be harder to know exactly what the right thing to do is."
     
     
    Bratt agreed, saying if evacuees remain out of their homes for extended periods or if aid money doesn't arrive in timely fashion, opinions will change.
     
    There's also the final financial tally for a province that is already running more than $10 billion in deficit this year.
     
    "The longer this drags out, the more things get complicated," said Bratt.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Competition Bureau scratches Staples-Office Depot battle off to-do-list

    Both Canada's Competition Bureau and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission had challenged the proposal, arguing it would harm competition in the office products business.

    Competition Bureau scratches Staples-Office Depot battle off to-do-list

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image
    At least a dozen expectant mothers claim an Ontario ultrasound clinic gave them the wrong images of their unborn children.

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image

    Montreal Latest Canadian City To Test Body Cameras For Police Officers

    Montreal has become the latest Canadian city to equip its police officers with body cameras.

    Montreal Latest Canadian City To Test Body Cameras For Police Officers

    Conditions That Must Be Met Before Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuees Can Go Home

    lberta government says wildfire evacuees could start returning to Fort McMurray as early as June 1. But Premier Rachel Notley says that date is contingent on certain conditions being met within the city. Here are those conditions: 

    Conditions That Must Be Met Before Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuees Can Go Home

    Sentencing Hearing For Toronto Cop Who Shot Teen On Streetcar Continues Today

    Sentencing Hearing For Toronto Cop Who Shot Teen On Streetcar Continues Today
    Const. James Forcillo's lawyer argued on Wednesday that the injuries Sammy Yatim, 18, suffered from a second round of bullets should not be a significant aggravating factor in determining the officer's sentence.

    Sentencing Hearing For Toronto Cop Who Shot Teen On Streetcar Continues Today

    Nellie McClung Top Choice For First Canadian Woman On Face Of Banknote: Poll

    Nellie McClung Top Choice For First Canadian Woman On Face Of Banknote: Poll
    The survey found 27 per cent of respondents favoured McClung, a suffragette who fought for women to be legally recognized as persons in Canada.

    Nellie McClung Top Choice For First Canadian Woman On Face Of Banknote: Poll