Medicine Hat News

Door opens to more aid for Sask. ranchers hit by fall wildfires

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The Saskatchew­an government is providing financial assistance to ranchers who suffered uninsurabl­e losses when their grazing land was damaged by wildfires earlier this fall.

Government Relations Minister Larry Doke says in a release that producers who lost property can apply to the Provincial Disaster Assistance Program for aid feeding livestock.

Doke says grazing land is not insurable for losses due to fire, so the move will fill a gap and help producers’ operations recover sooner.

An extreme wind drove the Oct. 17 grassfires near Burstall, Tompkins and Leader that burned more than 360square kilometres of mixedused farmland and killed around 750 cattle for an estimated loss of about $1 million.

Most of the damage was insurable, but the government says some types of grazing land may qualify for aid under the assistance program.

The province announced last month that it would be matching donations up to $100,000 to the Saskatchew­an Stock Growers Associatio­n Wildfire Relief Fund, which was created to help producers affected by the grassfires.

The Saskatchew­an disaster assistance fund helps residents, small businesses, agricultur­al operations, First Nations, non-profit organizati­ons and communitie­s recover from natural disasters.

The program may help cover the cost of uninsurabl­e essential losses, cleanup, repairs and temporary relocation.

Hundreds of damage claims rolled into Saskatchew­an Government Insurance in the days following the fires.

The blazes also took a human toll. About 900 people were ordered out of the town of Leader as a precaution while an evacuation order was also issued for Burstall, which has a population of 300.

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