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Wildfire evacuees from Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., speak of the chaos of Saturday's evacuation

Worry has set in for N.W.T. wildfire evacuees who've been told they could be away from their homes for a week.

Residents settling into Norman Wells and other communities

Rows of cots set up in a large room.
Cots have been set up in Norman Wells for evacuees from Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., who have told they may be out of their community for a week. (Emma Tranter/CBC)

As residents of Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., prepared themselves to evacuate on Saturday due to a wildfire, many were in a panic, said community councillor Lucy Jackson.

Saturday morning was a regular day for residents, until the wildfire that now threatens the community of just over 500 people broke out, growing rapidly and triggering an evacuation.

As of Monday morning, the wildfire had reached the community but hadn't burned any structures, according to N.W.T. Fire.

"It's sort of a new experience for all of us in Fort Good Hope. Of course, we had fires in the past, but we never had to go through this," Jackson said.

The order to leave Fort Good Hope — a community of about 500 people located on the Mackenzie River in the Sahtu Region — came without warning. Hundreds of residents were flown to Norman Wells, while others went to Délı̨nę or a fish camp near Fort Good Hope.

"[The order was that] we have to leave now, we have to get ready and with what we had on. Some of us packed a few things and … and there was a lot of panicking," Jackson told CBC News from the evacuation welcome centre in Norman Wells, N.W.T.

"You know, people had to calm down… but it's one of those things, I guess, that we learn, you know?"

A woman sits in a gym.
Lucy Jackson from Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., is now in Norman Wells after a wildfire forced the community to evacuate. (Emma Tranter/CBC)

Norman Wells welcomes evacuees

Sarah Baker of Norman Wells has been helping evacuees get settled in her town. This included greeting them at the airport and registering them.

"It took a while for the planes to get here. But once they started flowing, they were just coming back to back to back," she told CBC News.

Amid the chaotic day, the stress and anxiety wasn't limited to evacuees, Baker said.

"Even though you're feeling a bit anxious — I know there's some emotions that are running high and stuff like that — on top of all that, you still have to try and focus on what you can do to support the evacuees coming into our community," she said.

Prior to the evacuees' arrival, Baker helped set up cots in the school's gymnasium. 

People who fled fire in Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., scared about what they'll return to

5 months ago
Duration 0:57
Frank Pope, mayor of Norman Wells, N.W.T., says his town is stepping in to try and take care of people forced out of Fort Good Hope by fire.

She spoke to CBC News on Sunday from a school gymnasium where evacuees were eating a meal. Looking ahead to Monday, she said there was some concern that volunteer capacity would shift when those who work nine-to-five jobs go back to work. However, she said that the hope is that some of the evacuees will be able to step in and support meal preparations.

Waiting it out

George Grandjambe of Fort Good Hope told CBC News that the stress of the evacuation didn't end when people landed in Norman Wells. That's because they learned they could be away from home for a full week, and many are tight on money, he said.

"We all got caught off guard and, and some of us are starting to feel the financial stress because we don't have money to sustain ourselves here in Norman Wells." 

Grandjambe said they've been in touch with elected officials who have assured them that evacuees will receive some financial support. 

There was also worry about what they'd left behind.

A man sits in a gymnasium.
George Grandjambe says he and other residents of Fort Good Hope worry for their homes. Some are starting to feel the financial stress of the wildfire evacuation, he said. (Emma Tranter/CBC)

"You look into the faces of a lot of the evacuees here, they're really worried and concerned because they have a lot to lose," he said.

"Their vehicles, they have boats, they have houses, they have all kinds of expensive things that they own and they could lose that," he said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tessa Vikander is a CBC News reporter covering local and national news. Previously she reported for Toronto Star, Reuters, IndigiNews and CTV News. You can contact her at tessa.vikander@cbc.ca.

With files from Emma Tranter