Toronto Star

Fatal fire should spur feds to act, chief says

OPP investigat­ors and stress team arrive on reserve

- CHINTA PUXLEY THE CANADIAN PRESS

A First Nations chief says the deaths of nine people in a house fire on a remote northern Ontario reserve should spur the federal government to improve what he says are “Third World conditions” on dozens of reserves.

“We can’t let these people die in vain,” Isadore Day with the Chiefs of Ontario said Thursday.

“There should be a direct and immediate response to this situation. This is typical across all First Nations that are living in Third World conditions.”

A blaze that erupted in a family home late Tuesday night on the Pikangikum reserve killed six adults and three children.

Ontario Provincial Police said investigat­ors and a stress team were in the community, but finding the cause of the blaze could take “a week or more.”

A fundraisin­g page created by a community member identified the dead as Gilbert and Annette Strang, their daughter Faith, Faith’s husband, Dietrich Peters, and the younger couple’s three children: Ireland, 4, Aubree, 2, and 8-month-old Amber.

The Strangs’ son Gilbert and his wife, Sylvia Peters, also died in the fire, it said.

Previous inquests into similar tragedies have highlighte­d the challenges facing remote northern reserves such as Pikangikum.

Homes are dilapidate­d, not built to comply with any modern code and often don’t have running water, let alone a smoke detector. There are often several generation­s of families sharing a tiny bungalow, heightenin­g the potential toll fires can take when they break out.

“Most homes are simply a death trap,” Day said.

Any fires spread quickly and communitie­s are often woefully unpre- pared. Many don’t have fire trucks and rely on water trucks with no more pressure than a garden hose. If a community is lucky enough to have a fire truck, there are often not enough trained volunteers to operate it properly, inquests and internal government reports have found.

Day said more than 90 per cent of homes don’t have running water in Pikangikum.

“Is there going to be a fire hydrant outside? No, there isn’t.”

Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett said Thursday the deaths underscore the need to improve living conditions on reserves.

“We are with them,” she said. “My job always is to do everything in our power to prevent the preventabl­e.”

She said money in the recent federal budget will help improve the deplorable state of reserve housing. But she couldn’t say when a community such as Pikangikum could expect vastly improved living standards.

“We are in the process of beginning that, one step at a time,” Bennett said. “In places like Pikangikum, there is a demonstrat­ed need that it’s a high priority.”

National Chief Perry Bellegarde of the Assembly of First Nations said the federal budget was a good start to make up for decades of neglect. Too many indigenous people are dying in fires that are completely preventabl­e, he said. “How many more deaths have to happen before action is implemente­d? It’s not acceptable in 2016.”

An internal federal government report examining insurance coverage for First Nations found almost half across Canada had “little to no fire protection” and relied too heavily on poorly trained volunteer firefighte­rs.

The 2011 report, obtained by The Canadian Press through access-toinformat­ion legislatio­n, found fire rates for First Nations were 2.4 times higher than for the rest of Canada. First Nations residents were also 10 times more likely to die in a house fire than someone living off reserve. In Pikangikum, community members tried to come to grips with what one member described as one of the worst events in a long, troubled history.

Education director Kyle Peters said hundreds of mourners gathered near the charred remains of the home Wednesday night for a vigil. People lit floating lanterns and strung candles around the fire scene.

There was “a lot of sadness and tears and people trying to realize that it actually happened,” he said, adding that other members of the victims’ families were due to arrive in Pikangikum later Thursday afternoon.

Funeral and memorial arrangemen­ts likely won’t be made until next week, he added.

Children are the focus of at least some of Pikangikum’s efforts to rebound from the tragedy.

Peters said community youth are at greater risk of emotional trauma in the aftermath of the fire, since they may be left on the sidelines at a time when adults are struggling to come to terms with what happened.

The community has called upon Right to Play, a global organizati­on promoting activity for children in high-risk situations, to help fill that void in the coming days.

Rose Lipton, the organizati­on’s director of Canadian programs, said a special team was flying in to temporaril­y ramp up the program that already exists in the community.

Sports, graffiti walls and activities to promote reflection will all be available to Pikangikum’s youth for at least a week, she said.

“In a time of grief, the community shuts down and has to deal with that,” she said. “That’s when it’s most important that there’s something stable and consistent for the kids, something that feels like a little bit of normal.”

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Ireland, top left, Aubree, holding the bottle, and Amber died in a fire on the First Nations reserve in Pikangikum, Ont., on Tuesday, along with six adults.
FACEBOOK Ireland, top left, Aubree, holding the bottle, and Amber died in a fire on the First Nations reserve in Pikangikum, Ont., on Tuesday, along with six adults.

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