Saskatoon StarPhoenix

EVACUATION AT DISTANCE

Big wrinkle to fire season

- NICK PEARCE

A high-risk wildfire season has sparked new challenges for northern municipali­ties that may have to evacuate while social distancing. “The wildfire season is upon us,” noted to Rick Laliberte, commander of the North West Incident Command Centre.

Natural Resources Canada projects a higher-risk season this year, which could mean increased chances of blazes igniting from improperly disposed cigarettes and ignored fire bans.

For Laliberte, that risk means balancing fire and pandemic management while facing likely evacuation­s.

The Incident Command Centre has told its membership, which is comprised of northern leaders, to keep aware and to institute fire bans, he said.

Once evacuation­s take place, there’s another question: where to send displaced residents who are physically distancing.

Complicati­ng matters is the public health order restrictin­g gatherings to 10 people, which may make transporta­tion tricky, Laliberte said. On top of that, evacuation­s tend to prioritize vulnerable residents, like those with respirator­y issues, who are also at higher health risk during the pandemic.

During evacuation­s, potential outbreaks require quick identifica­tion and isolation, Laliberte said. Doing that in the middle of an evacuation will be difficult, and may require mobile isolation units.

This will all be an “enormous challenge,” said University of Saskatchew­an professor Greg Poelzer, who researches northern governance.

He estimated there’s a 95 per cent chance that significan­t evacuation­s will be needed.

In a typical high-risk fire season, there would likely be evacuation­s from more than one community, and it’s possible that could mean as much as a third of the region’s population, judging from past years, he added.

“In the middle of a ... pandemic, you can just imagine the logistical nightmare that could bring.”

For example, evacuating a hardhit community like La Loche would require accommodat­ions for residents needing cots and beds.

That could mean finding up to two or three times as much space while following physical distancing, Poelzer said.

“It is a whole supply chain of caring for people who have been evacuated that don’t have their home belongings with them, and a number of them are going to be affected.”

He said the province should be in contact with the mayors of possible host municipali­ties like Saskatoon, Prince Albert and Meadow Lake.

Preparatio­ns should also be made in advance to consider logistics like spacing, food provisions, and blankets.

Poelzer added leadership updating residents is a key assurance for them, and should include elements like a transporta­tion plan, some mustering points and where they’ll stay once evacuated.

“To be brutally honest, avoid a goat rodeo: The last thing you want to be doing is making plans on the fly. There’s no excuse for that to happen,” he added.

Northern communitie­s already face comparativ­ely lower incomes, higher unemployme­nt rates, and increased costs for things like power bills, he said, all of which continue to operate in the background.

“We have neighbours that are confrontin­g, and will confront this summer, challenges far beyond anything we can imagine,” he said.

“It’s really important as Saskatchew­an people that we step up and help our neighbours out when the time calls.”

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 ?? WILDFIRE MANAGEMENT BRANCH. ?? Provincial officials are anticipati­ng that 2020 will be a higher-risk season for wildfires in Saskatchew­an.
WILDFIRE MANAGEMENT BRANCH. Provincial officials are anticipati­ng that 2020 will be a higher-risk season for wildfires in Saskatchew­an.

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