May 26, 2024
Wildfire evacuation orders lifting for residents of Edson, Alta., and Yellowhead County | CBC News

Wildfire evacuation orders lifting for residents of Edson, Alta., and Yellowhead County | CBC News

After nearly a week away, residents of Edson, Alta., and Yellowhead County have been given the green light to return home.

The wildfire evacuation order issued June 9 will lift at 6 p.m. Thursday, allowing residents to head home, town and county officials said during a noon update on social media. 

However, an evacuation alert is now in effect for residents in the region, meaning people should be prepared to evacuate on short notice within four hours. 

“From a firefighting perspective this fire is like holding a tiger by the tail. We cannot turn our backs on it. This is the reality,” Christine Beveridge, Edson’s chief administrative officer, said during Thursday’s update.

The town, 200 kilometres west of Edmonton, is among dozens of communities across Alberta forced to evacuate during this year’s historic wildfire season.

More than 8,000 residents were ordered to leave on June 9 as a fire grew dangerously close to Edson’s southern boundary. It was the second time this year the town was evacuated due to the threat of wildfire. 

As crews continue to work on hotspots, municipal officials say much-needed rain has bolstered efforts to control wildfires. 

“When it comes to precipitation, five millimetres equals about one day of reprieve, meaning approximately we’ve received probably 50 mm of rain from this rain event over the last couple of days,” Beveridge said.

The rainfall allows firefighters up to 14 days to go safely into areas impacted by wildfire to assess and further control the damage. 

Despite the rain, the flames of an out-of-control wildfire are still burning within 1.5 kilometres from Edson’s southern edge. But firefighters have pushed the fire south past the McLeod River near Willmore Park. 

More than 300 firefighters, along with aircraft and heavy equipment, are being used to suppress fire in the region.

On Thursday morning, Edson’s streets began to show signs of life.

Some grocery store shelves were being restocked as other essential services, including gas stations and pharmacies, began to open again. 

Partial re-entry to northern parts of Yellowhead County began Wednesday evening. 

Remaining evacuation orders are now lifted and will impact the Marlboro and Millers Lake areas, and an area south of Highway 16.

Returning residents were cautioned that essential services would be limited and the wildfire danger remains high.

The wildfire outside Edson, officially known as EWF-031, is the largest fire in a complex of a three fires that have spread out across the county. EWF-031 is more than 300,000 hectares in size, which is 4½ times the size of Edmonton, Beveridge noted.

During Thursday’s update, Edson Mayor Mayor Kevin Zahara cautioned residents that medical support has not been restored to full capacity as the community’s emergency room remains closed with only one ambulance available. 

Yellowhead County is expected to provide its next wildfire update early next week, said chief administrative officer Luc Mercier.

Heavy wildfire smoke has set in throughout the town of Edson and the surrounding area. Air quality on Monday is listed as very-high risk.
Edson has been evacuated for nearly a week. Evacuation orders are expected to soon lift and the town is preparing for residents to return. (Town of Edson/Facebook)

As of Thursday afternoon, 78 forest fires were burning across the province. Of the 76 inside Alberta’s forest protection areas, 21 were burning out of control. 

A slow-moving low pressure system now moving across the province brought heavy rain overnight and into Thursday morning.

There were rainfall warnings for northeastern and central parts of the province, along with air quality advisories prompted by wildfire smoke. 

The rains have helped dampen the danger in Wood Buffalo, where a 60,568-hectare wildfire is threatening the remote community of Fort Chipewyan, triggering evacuation orders earlier this month. 

According to Environment Canada, more than 70 mm of rain had fallen in the Wood Buffalo region overnight with up to 15 mm more expected to fall Thursday.

As the rain moves northeastward toward Saskatchewan, Environment Canada expects Alberta to remain in an unsettled weather pattern with scattered showers and blustery winds.

The wet weather is offering welcome respite from dry, sweltering heat that has set the stage for an historic wildfire season.

The rains, however, are not expected to provide lasting relief. Alberta’s forests are parched, following months of drought-light conditions in the province, and the fire risk is expected to escalate when the seasonal summer heat returns.

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