Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alberta Reviews Fort McMurray Re-entry Plan As Flames Spread North

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 May, 2016 11:12 AM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Alberta officials are taking a second look at their plan to allow people to return home to Fort McMurray after a raging wildfire spread north toward oilsands plants.
     
    The fire overnight destroyed a 665-room workcamp north of the city and two other camps are threatened by the flames.
     
    Two explosions in the city damaged 10 homes and poor air quality forced staff working to clean the hospital and natural gas utility workers to leave.
     
    Premier Rachel Notley says the focus of firefighting efforts would be protecting oilsands plants north of Fort McMurray.
     
    The wildfire has grown to about 3,550 square kilometres.
     
    SAFETY COMMISSION SAYS NO DANGER FROM RADIOLOGICAL DEVICES AFTER ALBERTA WILDFIRE
     
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission says there is no risk to the public or the environment from radiological devices that could have been affected by the wildfire in Fort McMurray.
     
    The commission sent two radiation safety specialists to the oilsands city last Thursday after getting a request for assistance from Alberta's provincial emergency operations centre.
     
    Those specialists have completed field verifications and confirm that the devices stored in about 20 locations are OK.
     
    The equipment, including radiography cameras used to check welding work and portable gauges to measure density of roadways, is all in packaging designed to survive building or vehicle fires.
     
     
    The specialists were also asked to check a radioactive waste site just south of Fort McMurray that is under the control of Atomic Energy of Canada.
     
    The fire burned over the site, but the commission says the specialists confirmed that there is no safety concern.
     
    The waste is from the 1930s to the 1950s, when uranium ore was transported from the Northwest Territories to the railhead at what is now Fort McMurray. Some of the uranium spilled along the route. The cleanup was completed in 2003.
     
    The site has about 43,000 cubic metres of low-level radioactive waste made up of low-grade uranium ore residue and contaminated soil. It is fenced in, capped with a thick layer of soil and basically looks like grassy hills.
     
    The vegetation on top burned, but a spokeswoman for Atomic Energy of Canada said last week that there is no worry about the site catching fire.
     
    More than 2,400 homes and buildings were destroyed in the wildfire and 530 were damaged, but firefighters have been credited with saving up to 90 per cent of the city.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CBC Videographer In Hospital After Vehicle Hits Ditch In Northern Alberta

    CBC Videographer In Hospital After Vehicle Hits Ditch In Northern Alberta
    Officers responded to a crash just outside Lac La Biche about 5:25 a.m.

    CBC Videographer In Hospital After Vehicle Hits Ditch In Northern Alberta

    RCMP Pleads Not Guilty On Labour Code Charges In Moncton Rampage Deaths

    RCMP Pleads Not Guilty On Labour Code Charges In Moncton Rampage Deaths
    RCMP has pleaded not guilty to four charges of Labour Code violations stemming from the force's response to a 2014 shooting rampage in Moncton, N.B.

    RCMP Pleads Not Guilty On Labour Code Charges In Moncton Rampage Deaths

    U.S. Consultant Hired To Implement Lean Hard On Saskatchewan In Book

    U.S. Consultant Hired To Implement Lean Hard On Saskatchewan In Book
    In 2011, the Saskatchewan Party government hired John Black and Associates to introduce its the cost-cutting system to health care.

    U.S. Consultant Hired To Implement Lean Hard On Saskatchewan In Book

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight
    Jane Philpott has announced an investment of $4.95 million for research into the mosquito-borne virus and for humanitarian aid to countries hardest hit by the epidemic.

    Ottawa Announces Almost $5 Million In Funding Towards Global Zika Fight

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government has tabled legislation aimed at regulating the taxi industry and ride-hailing company Uber.

    Quebec Government Introduces Bill To Regulate Taxi Industry And Uber

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum
    The minister is telling a Commons committee that the remaining two per cent should be housed by mid-June.

    Most Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees Now In Permanent Homes: John McCallum