
Norway House evacuates personal care home due to wildfire smoke, deteriorating air quality
CBC
Norway House Cree Nation moved residents of a personal care home in the community south Tuesday, as smoke from nearby wildfires continues to blow in and air quality deteriorates.
More than a dozen residents who live at the Pinaow Wachi personal care home in Norway House were evacuated to a facility in Winnipeg, about 460 kilometres to the south, that's also owned by the First Nation. The elders who left the community were accompanied by their caretakers on a Canadian Armed Forces C-130 Hercules aircraft.
"There's unpredictable things happening in and around Norway House," Chief Larson Anderson told CBC News Tuesday afternoon.
"We're not in danger of fires — just it's the smoke that's really more of an issue."
Norway House isn't under evacuation order, but is under an evacuation notice, with people ordered to be ready to leave.
The care home was evacuated "to be on the safe side," said Anderson. The community has been doing voluntary evacuations since last week, allowing elders, young children and some adults to get relief from the smoke, he said.
Around 150 voluntary evacuees have been moved out of the community so far, Anderson said.
Norway House is also the temporary home for many residents of Pimicikamak Cree Nation — also known as Cross Lake — who were given a mandatory evacuation order to leave their homes on May 28.
Some from Pimicikamak — about 70 kilometres north of Norway House — were flown out of the community at that point, but high winds and smoke grounded flights.
The remaining 6,500 residents were told to head to Norway House, even though the community was only expecting 1,000 people.
The Canadian Armed Forces said Tuesday it has evacuated more than 3,500 people from fire zones in the province, with work in the past 24 hours taking people from Pimicikamak to Winnipeg and from Pukatawagan, in northwestern Manitoba, to The Pas.
The federal government and the Canadian Armed Forces continue evacuation efforts for Pimicikamak and the community of Cross Lake, with multiple agencies participating in the response, along with community members and the local fire department, the province said in its Tuesday fire bulletin.
The out-of-control fire near Pimicikamak Cree Nation is about five kilometres away from the community and about 2,300 hectares in size, the bulletin said.
Manitoba's wildfire service is currently fighting 27 active wildfires across the province, and has seen 111 wildfires to date — well above the average of 88 for this time of year.













