Vancouver Sun

CONVOY ROLLS BY THE DAMAGE

- JOHN COTTER

Displaced Fort McMurray residents got a sobering drive-by view of their burned city Friday in a convoy that was moving evacuees south to reunite with families and friends.

Officials said shifting winds were giving the embattled northern Alberta city a break, but they added the fire that forced 88,000 people from their homes remained out of control and was likely to burn for weeks.

In Edmonton, Premier Rachel Notley announced the government will provide financial help to evacuees with immediate needs. Adults will receive $1,250 each and dependents $500. The cost to the province is estimated at $100 million.

The first convoy of 50 vehicles drove through the oilsands city from the north at about 6 a.m. It was escorted by the RCMP and a police helicopter was monitoring the area in case winds shifted to create a renewed fire danger along the route.

Jim Dunstan was in the convoy with his wife Tracy and two young sons.

“It looked like a war zone,” Dunstan said at a rest stop south of the fire-ravaged city.

“It was shocking to see the damaged cars all burned on the side of the road. It made you feel lucky to get out of there.”

Tracy said they escaped Tuesday through smoke and flames but soon ran out of gas, worried the wildfire would spread in their direction.

“It was pretty scary, especially when you have kids. It was so smoky it hurt my eyes,” she said.

Notley said the plan was to get 500 vehicles out by ground and 5,500 people by air. Another 7,000 were flown out Thursday.

“The city of Fort McMurray is not safe to return to, and this will be true for a significan­t period of time,” the premier said.

The road took convoys past blocks largely reduced to grey wastelands of charred concrete and ash, a gutted Super 8 motel and a levelled gas station.

More than 20,000 displaced residents had been living in oilsands work camps since Tuesday after the blaze cut the main road through Fort McMurray and sent residents fleeing either north or south.

Those who managed to escape south settled in hotels, campground­s, with friends or at reception centres in Edmonton and elsewhere.

The Red Cross reported about $30 million had been donated for victim relief and the Saskatchew­an government pledged $250,000.

The fire itself stood at just over 1,000 square kilometres. There was no renewed update on the number of structures burned, which stood at 1,600 Wednesday.

Chad Morrison, Alberta’s senior wildfire manager, said critical infrastruc­ture — the downtown, the water treatment plant, the hospital and the airport — remained intact.

Morrison said winds were moving the blaze away from Fort McMurray toward unoccupied areas to the north and east.

“This is a dynamic, challengin­g, extreme fire, so many things can happen. But at this point the prediction over the next two days is for the fire to move away to the northeast,” he said.

Morrison said a lack of rain baking the forest to combustibl­e conditions contribute­d to the power of the Fort McMurray blaze.

Melissa Blake, mayor of the Regional Municipali­ty of Wood Buffalo, which includes Fort McMurray, said she is heartened by everyone who has helped and by the resilience of residents.

“I’ve seen people who have lost everything break down and it’s heartbreak­ing and then the next morning you see them and there’s smiles. They realize that they’ve got their lives, they’ve got their family and they’ve got the opportunit­y to rebuild,” said Blake.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Drivers wait outside of Fort McMurray, Alta., for clearance to take firefighti­ng supplies into town this week.
SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES Drivers wait outside of Fort McMurray, Alta., for clearance to take firefighti­ng supplies into town this week.

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