Heavy smoke and technical issues delayed final evacuations on Mathias Colomb Cree Nation as community members continue to flee an out-of-control wildfire on Sunday.
Ralph Caribou, the UCN Coordinator for Mathias Colomb Cree Nation,┬аhas been actively working on the evacuations. The chief, a councillor and 40 residents were still trying to escape the area on Sunday morning, Caribou said in┬аan email to CBC.
“This morning heavy smoke continues,” he wrote.┬аA helicopter and plane both aiding with the evacuation efforts experienced engine problems┬аon Saturday due to the smoke, Caribou said, and were unable to take off.
Trains from the Keewatin Railway Company have been called in to evacuate those who remain.┬аCaribou said boats were also readied┬аjust in case.
The wildfire near Mathias Colomb is now approximately 230 square kilometres in size┬аand is less than a kilometre┬аaway from the community, the Manitoba Wildfire Service wrote in an email to CBC┬аSunday.
Additional support is being given to the local fire department to ensure any new starts or flying embers are taken care of and to ensure important infrastructure or individual homes are not damaged, the email said.
The Northwest Territories has sent four single engine water bombers and an observation┬аaircraft. Twenty firefighters from Ontario will arrive today and tackle the fires in the northwest, the Manitoba Wildfire Service said.
An estimated 2,000 people have evacuated from Mathias Colomb Cree Nation, Red Cross spokesperson Jason Small said in an email to CBC. While the┬аmajority of residents were transported out by train, the┬аremaining 30 to 40 individuals are being flown out today, according to the Red Cross.
The Canadian military sent two transport planes Saturday to assist in the evacuation. One of them removed 41 people and flew them about 200 kilometres south to The Pas, a spokesperson with Canadian Forces Base 17 Wing in Winnipeg said.┬а
Another military aircraft was sent earlier on Friday to airlift people to Winnipeg тАФ about 700 kilometres to the southeast тАФ but wasn’t able to land at that point due to poor visibility.
‘The sky was yellow’
Charmaine Greene, a resident of Mathias Colomb Cree┬аNation, is a front desk receptionist for the community’s nursing station. She fled to Winnipeg on Friday.
She said the fire was so close to the nursing station on Friday that hoses and sprinklers were placed near the building.
Greene said she and another staff member had been in the office for three days directing calls for the evacuation process, before co-workers banged on the door to let them know the fire was closing in.
“The sky was yellow and you could just see dark grey clouds rolling in. It was difficult to breathe outside.”
Greene is relieved to have fled and said she hopes all the children and those with respiratory issues have been evacuated.
She said residents of Mathias Colomb were used to smoke from nearby wildfires in the summer, but she has never seen an evacuation in the 11 years she has lived there.