Medicine Hat News

HIGH LEVEL FIRES

Mayor says threat still very real

-

HIGH LEVEL The mayor of a northweste­rn Alberta town says the threat from a powerful wildfire burning three kilometres away has not passed and warns evacuees they could be out longer than expected.

High Level Mayor Crystal McAteer told a news conference Wednesday that firefighti­ng is going well, but everyone is at the mercy of the weather.

“I want to stress the importance to everyone, especially evacuees, that the danger has not passed nor has it diminished,” McAteer said. “We know based on recent experience­s of Slave Lake and of Fort McMurray that wildfires are highly unpredicta­ble and can change at any moment.

“I am pleading with everyone to be patient and that the evacuation of High Level will continue into the foreseeabl­e future.”

Nearly 5,000 people cleared out of High Level and nearby First Nations on the long weekend with flames from the out-of-control Chuckegg Creek fire licking at the southern edge of the community, located 750 kilometres northwest of Edmonton.

Evacuee Stefanie Brown said she’s more concerned for the safety of those fighting the blaze than she is about the townhouse she left behind.

“If it burns down our stuff, we’ll buy more,” Brown said Wednesday after a 1,300-kilometre drive south to Medicine Hat, Alta., where her mother lives.

The school teacher’s car was gassed up, her electronic devices charged and her bags packed by the time her phone blared Monday with an emergency alert that High Level was being evacuated.

She knew from experience how important it was to be prepared.

Brown had to flee Medicine Hat during massive floods in 2013 and forgot to pack key documents and mementoes from her late father. Luckily, her secondfloo­r condo stayed dry.

“The first time I didn’t listen when they told us to get prepared, and then, when it was time to go, I didn’t even know what to put in my car,” she recalled.

This time, Brown, her two children and two dogs piled into her hatchback to make it to safety.

Authoritie­s handled the evacuation well, she added. “They did it with enough advance notice and time that people didn’t panic.”

Fire officials said Wednesday they are continuing to prepare the town for any potential shift in winds.

“The High Level area has been experienci­ng drought-like conditions for quite some time,” said Scott Elliot with Alberta Wildfire. “The fire has been exhibiting extreme behaviour for multiple days and has made control efforts extremely difficult.”

The good news, Elliot said, is that the spread has been away from the community due to the winds.

“This has given us an opportunit­y to put some preparatio­n and control measures in place in order to manage the threat to the town,” he said.

Officials said they’ve been able to protect power poles to the west and the south, and also created a fireguard between the fire and the town.

Winds were expected to shift slightly in the coming days and push smoke from the fires south rather than north.

“The forecast, unfortunat­ely, doesn’t seem to be giving us a break,” said Elliot. “We are not really getting a big blast of rain that we are going to need.”

If they get a west wind on the fire, he said, it will again put the town and other nearby communitie­s at increased risk.

The blaze has now eaten its way through about 920 square kilometres of forest, which is an area bigger than the size of Calgary.

Alberta Wildfire had 76 firefighte­rs and 24 helicopter­s battling the blaze. Some 110 firefighte­rs were working to protect structures in High Level and properties in Mackenzie County.

Another 60 emergency service volunteers, as well as RCMP and Sheriffs, are patrolling the community to keep it safe.

 ?? CP HANDOUT COURTESY GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA ?? Smoke column can be seen from the Town of High Level, on Tuesday evening. The town’s mayor says the threat from a powerful wildfire burning three kilometres away has not passed and warns evacuees they could be out longer than expected.
CP HANDOUT COURTESY GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA Smoke column can be seen from the Town of High Level, on Tuesday evening. The town’s mayor says the threat from a powerful wildfire burning three kilometres away has not passed and warns evacuees they could be out longer than expected.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada