Thousands of fire evacuees in Quebec receive green light to return home
CBC
Thousands of residents from Chibougamau, Que., and other municipalities started making their way home Monday morning after having been forced to leave due several forest fires raging in the province.
During a news conference Monday morning, Premier François Legault said residents would soon begin to return to Lac-Barrière, Oujé-Bougoumou, Waswanipi, Obedjuwan and Lac-Simon.
The premier says there will be fewer than 4,000 displaced people left by the end of the day, mostly residents from Normétal, Lebel-sur-Quévillon, Beaucanton, Val-Paradis and Saint-Lambert.
Chibougamau Mayor Manon Cyr says she feels relieved.
"Life in Chibougamau will slowly resume, one day at a time," she told Radio-Canada's C'est jamais pareil.
The mayor says essential services such as pharmacies and grocery stores are operational though their stocks will need to be replenished tomorrow.
The hospital has also reopened and can offer basic services, as staff continue to trickle back in.
"Of course, people with fragile health, who currently have health concerns, we don't recommend they return immediately, ... to give everyone time to settle into their functions whether that be in the hospital or other services," she told Radio-Canada.
Students will be able to return to school as of Wednesday.
Chibougamau is still covered by a blanket of smoke from a fire burning about 20 kilometres away, but Cyr says it does not pose a risk to the population.
In Quebec, there are currently 127 active fires affecting over a million hectares.
"It will be a long fire season," said Cyr.
Because the risk of forest fires remains high, she says travel to Chibougamau residents is limited to resident. Tourists or hunters and visiting fishing enthusiasts are not permitted to visit the area at this time.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.