Re-entry for residents of Fort Chipewyan, surrounding areas expected to begin June 22 after essential services restored

News Release

Update 47: Alberta wildfire situation (June 21, 4:30 p.m.)


Re-entry for residents of Fort Chipewyan and surrounding areas is expected to begin June 22 after essential services are restored.

Current situation
General community re-entry is the second phase of a plan to return all residents to their homes and is tentatively scheduled to begin on Thursday, June 22.
The mandatory evacuation order remains in place. It will be lifted once all essential services in Fort Chipewyan are confirmed ready for everyone to return home.
Residents with mobility issues and health conditions will be returned home once general community re-entry is complete.
Visit rmwb.ca for more information.
An evacuation order remains in effect for Little River Cree Nation – Fox Lake.
Visit 511.alberta.ca for up-to-date information on road closures and travel advisories.
Support continues to be available to Albertans 24-7. Visit alberta.ca/emergency or call 310-4455.
Current wildfire information is available on the Alberta Wildfire Status Dashboard.
Current year wildfires by suspected cause:
Human: 390 (Human-caused wildfires cover several different categories – everything from recreational fires to agricultural incidents to wildfires caused by people on residential land. Human-caused wildfires account for more than half of all wildfires annually.)
Lightning: 150
Under investigation: 116
Albertans are asked to do their part to prevent new wildfires by respecting fire bans or restrictions in their areas. Visit albertafirebans.ca for details.
Special air quality statements remain in effect across parts of the province. Visit airquality.alberta.ca to find out the level of health risk associated with your local air quality.
Number of evacuation orders: 2
Alberta Emergency Alerts: 1 order
Number of evacuees: 3,693
Alberta currently has more than 2,600 personnel working on wildfires. This includes support from partner agencies across Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Chile and South Africa.
Members of the 3rd Canadian Division and the Royal Canadian Air Force have redeployed after concluding operations to support firefighting efforts in Alberta.
Support for evacuees
Those evacuated due to wildfires should register at local reception centres or at emergencyregistration.alberta.ca.
Since the announcement of one-time emergency financial assistance for evacuees, more than 25,800 applications have been processed.
More than $33.2 million in e-transfers has been sent to evacuees.
More than $11.5 million in debit cards has been distributed.
Donations
Albertans who wish to help can make cash donations through the Canadian Red Cross or within their regions to a recognized charitable organization of their choice.
The Canadian Red Cross has launched an Immediate Support to Not-for-Profit Organizations program to deliver urgent and ongoing support for people affected by wildfires across Alberta.
Eligible community organizations providing immediate relief assistance may apply for $5,000 in one-time funding. View full program eligibility criteria.
For more information on the emergency and supports for evacuees, go to alberta.ca/emergency.

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