Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

More Than 2,000 Forced To Leave Manitoba Communities Due To Wildfires

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2016 12:00 PM
    THE PAS, Man. — More than 2,000 people have been ordered to evacuate two northern Manitoba communities due to approaching wildfires.
     
    The Manitoba government said Friday that residents must leave Easterville and Chemawawin First Nation because of smoke and the threat from a fire that has moved to within half-a-kilometre of the community.
     
    Fire crews, including two water bombers, are working on three fires in the area.
     
    Approximately 70 people from the community of Easterville will be heading to The Pas while up to 2,000 people from the neighbouring Chemawawin First Nation will be going to Winnipeg.
     
    A graduation ceremony on the Chemawawin reserve was cut short before the grads even got their diplomas because of the evacuation order.
     
     
    Melissa Houle of Easterville was attending the ceremony. She said it started at 3 p.m. Thursday but half an hour later they got word from the Red Cross to get out.
     
    “They are busing everybody out,” said Houle, adding people were told they were only allowed to take one bag.
     
    The communities are 450 kilometres north of Winnipeg.
     
    The government says support and co-ordination of the Chemawawin First Nation evacuation will be handled by the Canadian Red Cross.
     
    The province says there have been 100 wildfires recorded in the province so far this year. The average for this date is 233.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Against Pro-life Student Club In Failed Charter Argument

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Against Pro-life Student Club In Failed Charter Argument
    VANCOUVER — A free-speech battle by opponents of abortion at the University of Victoria has been shut down by British Columbia's highest court.

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Against Pro-life Student Club In Failed Charter Argument

    Canadian Competition Bureau Completes Google Investigation Started In 2013

    Canadian Competition Bureau Completes Google Investigation Started In 2013
    The Competition Bureau says Google Inc. has agreed not to reintroduce clauses in some of its agreements with advertisers that the regulator says are anti-competitive.

    Canadian Competition Bureau Completes Google Investigation Started In 2013

    States Seek Ways To Regulate Steep Air-Ambulance Costs

    States Seek Ways To Regulate Steep Air-Ambulance Costs
    HELENA, Mont. — The first time Jason Ebert needed an air ambulance, it saved his life. The second time, it nearly broke the bank.

    States Seek Ways To Regulate Steep Air-Ambulance Costs

    Alberta Government Faces Questions On Possible Domino Effect Of Carbon Levy

    Alberta Government Faces Questions On Possible Domino Effect Of Carbon Levy
    EDMONTON — Premier Rachel Notley's government defended its carbon tax Monday in the face of suggestions that it will cost families a lot more than expected.

    Alberta Government Faces Questions On Possible Domino Effect Of Carbon Levy

    Water Agency Warns Of Rapid Snow Melt As Temperatures Climb Above Seasonal

    REGINA — People in eastern Saskatchewan may be enjoying temperatures near 20 C, but the Water Security Agency has a warning to go with the warm weather.

    Water Agency Warns Of Rapid Snow Melt As Temperatures Climb Above Seasonal

    Eradication Of Zika-Spreading Mosquito In Brazil Unlikely

    RECIFE, Brazil — In the 1940s and 1950s, Brazilian authorities made such a ferocious assault on Aedes aegypti — the mosquito that spreads the Zika virus — that it was eradicated from Latin America's largest country by 1958.

    Eradication Of Zika-Spreading Mosquito In Brazil Unlikely