North

Cape Dorset school fire: 1 fire truck not enough to put it out, says official

A hamlet official in Cape Dorset, Nunavut, says Sunday's fire at Peter Pitseolak High School was just too large for the community's single fire truck to handle.

'I can't say enough about how they tried their best,' says hamlet's SAO of firefighters

A Cape Dorset firefighter sprays water on debris from Peter Pitseolak high school on Monday. A hamlet official in Cape Dorset says Sunday's fire was just too large for the community's single fire truck to handle. (Jordan Konek/CBC)

A hamlet official in Cape Dorset, Nunavut, says Sunday's fire at Peter Pitseolak High School was just too large for the community's single fire truck to handle.

The high school burned to the ground despite the efforts of 16 firefighters to fight the flames.

"It was just complete exhaustion," says Cape Dorset Senior Administrative Officer Ed Devereaux.

"It was a lot, a lot of work and a lot of dedication. I can't say enough about how they tried their best to put it out."

Water to fight the fire had to be trucked down from the community's water point and then pumped into the truck.

Devereaux says hamlet council will discuss getting more firefighting equipment to avoid similar disasters in the future. 

'We cannot misuse anything within any of our schools so I'll be meeting with the parents and talking with the teachers and I think that those are the issues that we'll be talking about, too,' says Nunavut's Education Minister Paul Quassa. (Sima Sahar Zerehi/CBC)

"That will probably be on the plate to see what they can do to try to get more equipment here, including a new fire truck," he said.

RCMP say the fire was deliberately set. Three teenagers ages 13 to 16 have been charged with arson causing damage to property and arson with disregard for human life.

Nunavut's Education Minister Paul Quassa says the possibility that youth were involved in setting the fire concerns him.

"We cannot misuse anything within any of our schools so I'll be meeting with the parents and talking with the teachers and I think that those are the issues that we'll be talking about, too," he said. 

The community's high school students will be back to classes half-days on Thursday, sharing the elementary school until a longer-term solution can be found.