North

Highway 1 now open between Enterprise, N.W.T., and Alberta border

Two sections of Highway 1 in the N.W.T. have reopened to traffic after being closed over an active wildfire. 

Parts of the highway closed on Friday due to active wildfires

A road with trees and smoke in the distanfe
A screenshot from a video taken Friday by Fred Menacho near Redknife River on Highway 1 shows smoky conditions on the road. That portion of the highway is open to traffic. (Submitted by Fred Menacho )

Two sections of Highway 1 in the N.W.T. have reopened to traffic after being closed over an active wildfire. 

The N.W.T.'s Department of Infrastructure lists Highway 1 as open between kilometre 84, south of Enterprise, N.W.T., and the Alberta border. 

Pilot cars are escorting vehicles through the border, the department said in an update. 

The highway also reopened earlier on Saturday between the Highway 3 Junction and the Jean Marie River, N.W.T., access road.

That part of the highway was closed Friday when a fire, which was a previously undiscovered holdover fire, had grown to 1,500 hectares.

WATCH | The latest on the fires: 

As of Saturday morning, that fire had grown further, N.W.T. fire information officer Mike Westwick told CBC News. 

Westwick said the fire is still not a threat to Jean Marie River, though an N.W.T. fire update on Friday said there were cabins in the area of the fire.

The fire is about 100 kilometres west of the Enterprise junction at Highway 1 toward Fort Simpson and about 70  kilometres southeast of Jean Marie River, N.W.T.

'You could see the smoke ahead'

Hay River resident Kim Lea and her husband were in Edmonton for a medical appointment when the highway back into N.W.T. closed on Friday.

After staying the night with some friends in Peace River, they arrived on Zama Road, where the closure began at about 9 a.m. on Saturday. She estimated there were about a dozen vehicles there.

By about 9:30 a.m., a pilot truck was escorting her along Highway 35 to the N.W.T. border. They arrived home at about noon, she said. 

A highway with a road closed sign.
Pilot trucks escort vehicles along Highway 35 in Alberta towards the N.W.T. border on April 11, 2024. (Submitted by Kim Lea)

Lea said there was a lot of smoke on the Alberta side of the border close to the community of Indian Cabins. 

"You could see the smoke ahead, a lot of smouldering. Even though we had the air exchange turned off in the vehicle, you could still see the smoke."

After that, she said the drive was "blue skies and sunshine," with no visible signs of fire or smoke on the N.W.T. side of the border.