100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

NWT offers support to those affected by Fort McMurray fire

NWT residents are doing their part to assist those displaced by the devastating wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta.

As of Thursday morning, an estimated 1,600 homes and other buildings had been destroyed by the fire, prompting officials to declare a state of emergency in the province.

More than 80,000 people have fled their homes in the largest evacuation order ever issued in Alberta due to a wildfire. Roughly a quarter of evacuees traveled south to Edmonton.

NWT Premier Bob McLeod expressed his sympathies for Fort McMurray residents Wednesday and offered to help in any way the territorial government can.

“As Northerners, we know all too well the potentially devastating impact of wildfires and the threat they can pose to communities and people,” he said in a statement.

“We also know firsthand the challenges involved in fighting wildland fires and the tremendous demands it places on emergency responders, fire crews, air crews and all others who take their stand on the frontlines on behalf of their fellow citizens.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with these brave men and women and with all those currently displaced by this fire.”

McLeod has told Alberta Premier Rachel Notley the territory is prepared to offer help in the form of firefighting efforts or in the rebuild to come.

“I want to assure the people of Fort McMurray that Albertans can depend on their friends and neighbours in the Northwest Territories to offer support and assistance in these trying times and the weeks to come.”

Meanwhile, leaders in the territory’s Dehcho region are organizing fundraising efforts of their own and are encouraging community members to participate.

Two years ago, the small community of Kakisa was evacuated when a wildfire touched the edge of the community.

Joachim Bonnetrouge, chief of the Deh Gah Got’ie First Nation in Fort Providence, is encouraging community members to reach out to the people of Fort McMurray.

“We have been watching the news and have seen what is happening to the people of Fort McMurray,” he said in a statement.

“Our elders have always taught us to help each other. If you want to help, this will give us all the opportunity to.”

At Yellowknife’s Black Knight Pub, servers donated their tips to the Red Cross on Wednesday to assist those who have been displaced by the wildfire.

The city’s uptown Your Independent Grocer is also accepting donations to the charity.

Wildfire experts say a perfect storm of factors – a mild winter, low humidity and unseasonably high spring temperatures – has allowed the fire to grow so aggressively.

Those factors have many believing that the situation will get much worse before it gets better.

What’s in store for the NWT’s wildfire season? 

The territorial government’s Department of Environment and Natural Resources will brief the media on the NWT’s wildland fire situation Thursday afternoon.

Senior fire officials will provide an update on the current situation and an outlook for the week to come.

Two weeks ago, a fire research scientist told 100.1 the Moose the territory could be in store for a quick start to the forest fire season given the relatively dry winter we experienced.

2014 was the Northwest Territories’ worst forest fire season on record, when 385 fires burnt roughly 3.5 million hectares of land.

Despite a fast start to 2015, a total of 245 wildfires were recorded on the season, burning 646,954 hectares.

Mike Gibbins
Mike Gibbins
Hello and thank you for listening to 100.1 Moose FM! To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

GNWT examining feasibility of hosting 2035 Winter Olympic Games

The GNWT is considering whether to submit an official bid for the 2035 Winter Olympic Games, currently estimated to require an investment of $30 million.

Walk to Tuk 2026 honours and celebrates traditional Indigenous pathway

“Originally wasn't called Walk to Tuk, that name came about organically. People just started to call it Walk to Tuk and the name stuck,” says Tim Van Dam, a main organizer of the event. The initiative brings together individuals, schools, workplaces, families, and community groups across the territory to stay active by conceptually walking the length of the Big River, a distance of 1658 km from Zhatıé Kų́ę́ / Fort Providence to Tuktuuyaqtuuq / Tuktoyaktuk.

What is Giving Tuesday?

What is giving Tuesday? For organizations like the NWT’s SPCA, it is a day that celebrates and inspires giving that can mean giving food, funding or hours of care work to a calling. Nicole Spencer, executive director of the NWT SPCA, says because the SPCA receives very little funding from the territory, they rely on folks at the organization who work hard around the clock.

NWT and Atla. physicians streamline lab test protocols

The Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority announced that changes have been made regarding protocols for lab test orders. When physicians in Alta order lab tests that need to be collected in the NWT there will no longer be the need to book a follow up appointment to have your lab requisition form confirmed or re-written.

Lynx River Revisited, takes us North of 60

Melaw Nakehk’o, who is a Moosehide tanner, artist and filmmaker, noted for The Revenant, has just launched a weekly podcast that examines the legacy of the trailblazing drama North of 60. The premiere episode is scheduled to air today. Nakehk’o who has roots in the territory and Brie O’Keefe, with settler roots, both take a look into the legacy of North of 60, and its accuracy. The hosts’ use their own childhoods of growing up in the Dehcho region as a reference point.