Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hundreds of Fort McMurray Insurance Claims Unresolved Two Years After Wildfire

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 May, 2018 12:58 PM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Deadlines have been extended for hundreds of insurance claims that remain unresolved more than two years after a wildfire dubbed "The Beast" tore through Fort McMurray and surrounding areas in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo.
     
    "This is unprecedented, not just for the people of Wood Buffalo, but for our industry," Bill Adams, with the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said Wednesday.
     
    "We've never dealt with an event nearly of this magnitude."
     
    The ferocious fire in May 2016 consumed 10 per cent of the buildings in the northeastern Alberta city and forced 88,000 people from their homes for at least a month.
     
    With $3.7 billion in insured damage, the bureau has pegged the fire as the costliest disaster in Canadian history.
     
    Legislation sets out a two-year limit for insurance claims to be resolved, meaning the deadline for affected Wood Buffalo residents passed earlier this month.
     
    Normally, that would be more than enough time, Adams said. But insurers had to be flexible in fire's aftermath.
     
    "Individual insurers recognize that given the magnitude of the rebuilding, it's just physically not possible for all claims to be resolved within a two-year period," he said.
     
     
     
    As of May 10, 97 per cent of residential claims had been resolved. Some 900 are outstanding, but 85 per cent of those have been granted extensions — some by as much as a year.
     
    The courts are another avenue for recourse, but Adams could not say how many people have had to resort to that option so far.
     
    Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci said he was in Fort McMurray recently, where residents and the city's mayor raised concerns about unsettled insurance claims.
     
    "I heard loud and clear that our work in Wood Buffalo was not done," he said.
     
    Through the Superintendent of Insurance, the Alberta government urged insurers to allow more time for claims to be worked out.
     
    "I'm pleased to report all insurance companies have answered our call," Ceci said.
     
    "I truly appreciate the commitment by insurance companies to extend the limitation period and I appreciate the support the insurance industry has provided to the people of Fort McMurray and Wood Buffalo since the very beginning."
     
    Mayor Don Scott, who represents the area, said in a statement that the extensions are a positive step for residents who are still slogging through their insurance claims.
     
     
    "I encourage anyone with an outstanding insurance claim to contact their insurance company immediately to find out if they are willing to provide an extension, and if they experience any difficulty, they should contact Alberta's Superintendent of Insurance," he said. "I would also encourage them to contact a lawyer about filing a statement of claim to preserve their rights."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash
    REGINA — Police say it's too early to say what happened in a fatal bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team and whether charges will be laid.

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer
    A defence lawyer says his client's ongoing psychosis makes him unfit to stand trial for the murder of a high school girl in Abbotsford, B.C.

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man
    SURREY, B.C. — The family of a British Columbia man missing for a decade is pleading for any help in solving what the police are treating as a homicide.

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man

    Trudeau Government Rejects Liberal MPs' Call For Decriminalization Of All Drugs

    Trudeau Government Rejects Liberal MPs' Call For Decriminalization Of All Drugs
    The Trudeau government is rejecting a call from its own backbenchers to decriminalize all illicit drug use in Canada — just days before Liberals are set to debate the idea at a national convention in Halifax.

    Trudeau Government Rejects Liberal MPs' Call For Decriminalization Of All Drugs

    City Of Vancouver One Step Closer To Allowing Liquor Sales In Grocery Stores

    City Of Vancouver One Step Closer To Allowing Liquor Sales In Grocery Stores
    Councillors voted Tuesday to approve zoning bylaw amendments that will permit grocery stores to sell liquor.

    City Of Vancouver One Step Closer To Allowing Liquor Sales In Grocery Stores

    Vancouver Adopts Bylaw To Cut Watering To Two Days During Summer Months

    Vancouver Adopts Bylaw To Cut Watering To Two Days During Summer Months
    Despite an unusually wet April, the City of Vancouver is looking ahead to the parched days of summer as it announces new watering restrictions, beginning May 1.

    Vancouver Adopts Bylaw To Cut Watering To Two Days During Summer Months