In
view of the government and media denial about the real nature of the
Fort McMurray fires I was wonderign what the Canadian media is saying
right now.
Given what's left out of the picture there seems to be more lies than truth right now.
Trudeau, Canadian Media Mum as Threat From Climate Change Induced Wildfires Grows
Alberta oilfield workers head back to camps
16
May, 2016
UPDATE:
At 4:30 p.m. MT Monday, a mandatory evacuation order was issued for
all work camps north of Fort McMurray, up to and including Ruth Lake
Camp. Workers were told to head south on Highway 63.
Flights
began leaving the airport for Fort McMurray at about 7 a.m.
The
workers are heading to camps north of Fort McMurray. Some of them
were evacuated when the sites were threatened by wildfires, others
left to make room for evacuated residents.
Last
week, Premier Rachel Notley said bringing workers back to sites is a
separate process from re-entering Fort McMurray.
“It’s
important for folks in Fort McMurray to understand that, because, of
course, the city of Fort McMurray sustained quite a bit of damage and
we need to reaccess all those critical infrastructure pieces, as
opposed to most of the camps north of the city that were not impacted
at all,” Notley said.
Workers
said they’re excited to head back, but admitted the flight over
Fort McMurray would be emotional.
“When
driving out, we went through. When I went out Tuesday morning, you
didn’t see a lot from the road, but it was scorched on all sides
and there was still some flames going up on Beacon Hill and what
not,” Deb Farstad said.
“Just
to go back and kind of go over and see, especially what you couldn’t
see entirely right, like the mass of it is, you know, it’s just
unthinkable.”
Flights
from EIA to Fort McMurray will be happening for a few days.
The
airport recommends workers arrive two hours before their flight to
give themselves time to get processed.
Fort
McMurray residents will receive a phone call at 7 p.m. Monday with an
invitation to take part in a telephone town hall, where they’ll
learn the latest information, including when they’ll be allowed to
return to the city, and have a chance to ask questions.
Watch
video HERE
Air quality in Fort McMurray area rated an 'extreme' health risk, could delay recovery work
While
crews work to bring electricity and gas services back online in Fort
McMurray, air quality in the area is off the charts – and officials
said that could hamper work to eventually bring evacuated residents
back.
In
a news conference held Monday, Premier Rachel Notley said the
province’s Air Quality Health Index (AQHI) for parts of northern
Alberta, including Fort McMurray, was extreme – although air
quality is measured on a scale of 1 to 10, the rating in Fort
McMurray had been determined to be 38 as of 10 a.m. Monday.
As
a result, AHS has recommended members of the public who had applied
to go back, should not return until conditions improve – and that
workers in the area had been advised of the problem, while re-entry
of additional personnel had been delayed, as had ongoing vehicle
retrieval efforts.
The
premier said the air quality could delay work that would lead
officials to bring evacuated residents back.
One
major factor in returning evacuees to Fort McMurray is having the
hospital operational – the province said about 400 staff are on
site working to clean up the hospital.
Meanwhile,
a temporary medical facility has been set up in Fort McMurray for
first responders to use.
Officials
updated the status of two of the three wildfires, the wildfire
burning in the Fort McMurray area was about 285,000 hectares, and the
blaze had come within 10 to 12 kilometres of the Saskatchewan border.
Meanwhile,
in northwestern Alberta, the fire in Greenview County was about 800
hectares in size.
However,
crews were dealing with hot weather and low humidity, which were
expected to allow the fires to grow.
“Fire
conditions are really as bad now as they were on the first day of the
fire, and we expect a lot of fire activity today,” Rachel Notley
said.
Notley
said she hoped the “Alberta tradition” of a cold and wet May long
weekend would help crews get an upper hand on the fire.
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