Nova Scotia

Halifax-area evacuees visit destroyed homes for first time as wildfire burns for 5th day

Residents whose homes have been damaged or destroyed in a wildfire that continues to burn out of control outside Halifax were given the chance to see their properties Friday on bus tours of the charred and burned out landscapes.

Bus tour drove through devastation in Upper Tantallon, Hammonds Plains, Pockwock

Charred remains of what was once a home, surrounded by burned trees.
Evacuees from the Tantallon and Hammonds Plains fires northwest of Halifax were allowed to see damaged and destroyed homes during a bus tour of the area on Friday. Remains of a home are seen in this still from video taken during the tour of Hammonds Plains. (Mary Young)

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Residents whose homes have been damaged or destroyed in a wildfire that continues to burn outside Halifax were given the chance to see their properties Friday on bus tours of the charred landscape.

In an email sent to the affected residents by the Halifax Regional Municipality's emergency management office shortly after 8 p.m. AT Thursday, officials said the tour of some 200 homes would leave from the Canada Games Centre in Halifax at 11 a.m.

"Unfortunately, you will not be able to leave the bus to walk around your property," it said.

The email, which was provided to CBC News by a resident who lost their home, said staff would be on hand at the Canada Games Centre after the tour to answer questions and offer support.

Viewing the damage

Halifax-area homeowners take bus tour through properties ravaged by wildfire

1 year ago
Duration 0:44
People whose homes have been damaged in a wildfire outside of Halifax were given the chance to see their properties on Friday. Jason and Mary Young, whose home in the Highland Park area was completely destroyed, took part in a bus tour through the burned out community.

Dozens of people gathered at the Canada Games Centre on Friday to take part in the tour on city buses. 

Speaking to reporters after the two-hour drive through their neighbourhood, Mary and Jason Young from Highland Park said they had already seen that their home was destroyed on video but it was important for them to see it in person.

"It's one thing to see it on a screen but it's another to see it in real life right in front of you," Mary Young said.

"It helps you move on. It helps you make it real and deal with it. It really is like you're grieving."

Jason Young said it was a difficult experience but it was better that they went as a group with neighbours. 

Young said he and  his family got out in time with their pets but it was heartbreaking that many people were not so fortunate and lost pets.

Claude Langlois lost his home on Kata Court in the Highland Park subdivision.

Speaking before the tour, he said he was not home when the blaze broke out mid-Sunday afternoon in nearby Westwood Hills subdivision — roughly 25 kilometres outside Halifax — and could not get back in time to retrieve his double-doodle dog named Bear.

Some N.S. fire evacuees to tour damaged neighbourhoods

1 year ago
Duration 2:53
Halifax Mayor Mike Savage says some people will be allowed to view their fire-damaged neighbourhoods in a bus tour, but there will be precautions, as it's "still an active fire zone."

He was informed by police on Monday morning that his house had burned to the ground, and that Bear was likely dead.

Langlois said he'd seen videos of the rubble, so he knew what to expect, but he thinks seeing his house in person would help with the grieving process.

"Everything that makes it more real, it helps with the grief of it all," said Langlois, who is staying at a hotel in Halifax.

Two city buses are shown driving out of a parking lot, with an athletic center in the background.
Buses are shown departing the Canada Games Centre on Friday carrying residents who are travelling to see their damaged and destroyed homes for the first time. (Gareth Hampshire/CBC)

Still, he has not been happy with the communication from the municipality during this trying time.

"They were not there for us," he said.

Bill Moore, the municipality's executive director of community safety, said during a press conference Friday that residents had voiced concerns about how they were informed — a mass email — about how they would see their homes for the first time since the evacuation.

Moore said they had still not been able to contact 65 of the affected residents. He said it was decided an email was the best form of communication in the hopes that if some residents who have not yet been contacted saw it, they could join the tour.

"We thought it would be potentially worse than if they found out that they didn't get a call and then they found out that they didn't have an opportunity to go to the scene," said Moore, adding that the email did generate some replies and staff are following up.

Two burned bikes are seen beside a driveway and the ruins of a home burned by fire.
A home destroyed by fire is seen in the background in this photo from the Westwood Hills subdivision in the Upper Tantallon area, about 25 kilometres northwest of Halifax. (Mary-Catherine McIntosh/CBC)

"We regret the fact … that caused any more pain to those who have already been affected, but ... I give you my word that we will do our very best to try to keep people up to date."

Some residents allowed to return

Some residents who had to leave their homes because of the wildfire have been given the green light to go back.

Just after 4 p.m. Friday, an emergency alert stated the evacuation order was rescinded for the Lucasville Road area, a section south of Hammonds Plains Road around St. George Boulevard, and the Stillwater Lake area south of Pine Tree Crescent.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that two people were issued $25,000 fines, based on information given by the RCMP. In fact, no one has been given a $25,000 fine
    Jun 02, 2023 1:33 PM AT

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aly Thomson

Reporter/Editor

Aly Thomson is an award-winning journalist based in Halifax who loves helping the people of her home province tell their stories. She is particularly interested in issues surrounding justice, education and the entertainment industry. You can email her with tips and feedback at aly.thomson@cbc.ca.

With files from Information Morning Nova Scotia

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