Medicine Hat News

Alberta needs new operations centre to manage disasters: minister

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EDMONTON Alberta is looking at building a new operations centre to better manage how it responds to disasters such as the Fort McMurray wildfire.

Municipal Affairs Minister Shaye Anderson said the need for a larger and more modern nerve centre is one of the lessons learned from the fire last May that forced more than 80,000 people to flee the area and destroyed 2,400 homes and buildings.

Anderson told a Conference Board of Canada meeting on how communitie­s can be more resilient to natural disasters that government staff did an excellent job, but more preparatio­n is needed for future disasters.

“We realize that we need a bigger, newer provincial operations centre — something with more technology that is up to date and up to speed with what is going on with the world right now,” Anderson said Tuesday. “We are set on a path for that.

“We always need to be prepared in the future if something happens that is even bigger.” Anderson said the government is expecting a report evaluating how it responded to the wildfire to be released next month. The KPMG report is expected to include recommenda­tions on how the government should update its disaster planning.

Shane Schreiber, managing director of Alberta Emergency Management Agency, told the conference that communitie­s need to do more to prepare for disasters before they happen.

That includes training staff, developing flexible plans and building relationsh­ips with key people in other organizati­ons before something challengin­g happens.

Schreiber said legislatio­n and regulation­s cannot replace a corporate culture of co-operation in an emergency.

He said people have to prepare for the unthinkabl­e, such as evacuating a major city such as Fort McMurray. Officials must be prepared to make quick decisions based on who they know can do a task rather than waiting for lawyers to sign off on an order, Schreiber added.

 ??  ?? Shaye Anderson
Shaye Anderson

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