Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Returning Fort McMurray Residents Finding Smelly Refrigerators, Dandelion Lawns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2016 01:10 PM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Residents returning to their homes in Fort McMurray are tackling stinking refrigerators and grass grown tall and infested with dandelions as the fire-scarred city slowly springs back to life.
     
    A steady stream of traffic is moving into the northern Alberta oilsands hub as thousands who fled a wildfire a month ago return to see what's left.
     
    Fenton Lovell says he cried as he drove in and his eyes teared up again when he opened his fridge.
     
    "Fort McMurray strong!" he joked Wednesday morning.
     
    He's getting the house cleaned and ready so his wife and twin babies can return from Newfoundland. After boosting the dead battery in his pickup truck, he grabbed a welcome kit out of his mailbox and put a sign reading "natural gas required" in his front window.
     
    Pilar Ramirez spent the night sleeping in the back of a truck in Anzac, about 40 minutes southeast of Fort McMurray.
     
    She got to work cleaning as soon as she got into her downtown house, which she shares with co-workers at a concrete company.
     
    Her reaction when she first opened the door: "Oh, it's so disgusting!"
     
    "It smelled terrible, the food. Flies everywhere — and big ones. I said, 'Oh, my God, what happened here?'"
     
     
    One of Mike Maloney's first tasks was to mow the messy lawn in front of his home while his wife and three kids cleaned inside.
     
    "Everybody's happy but ... it's sad to see what did burn and some loss there. It's tragic for those people. But I think, all in all, everybody will survive."
     
    People driving in on the only highway into the area have found the forest on both sides blackened about half an hour out of town. The devastation is apparent from the road just inside city limits and a strong smell of smoke hangs in the air.
     
    Billboards that read "Safe Resilient Together" and "We Are Here. We Are Strong" greet people as they drive in. A huge Canadian flag hangs between the extended ladders of two fire trucks parked on a bridge over the road.
     
    The fire destroyed 2,400 structures, nearly 10 per cent of the city, when it ripped through last month and forced more than 80,000 residents to flee.
     
    Bob Couture, director of emergency management for the Wood Buffalo municipality, said he expects between 14,000 and 15,000 people to return Wednesday — the first day of what organizers have planned as a staged re-entry.
     
    "It's going to be an emotional event when we have those first cars pulling back into the community, because we can all remember when this community left on the evacuation. It was pretty dramatic, but now it's going to be, hopefully, a joyous event," Couture said Tuesday.
     
    The Red Cross is prepared to bus in as many as 2,000 residents who don't have their own cars. Donations to the relief agency sit at $112 million, but officials plan to update that figure this week.  
     
     
    Returning residents are being warned that it won't be business as usual and to bring with them two weeks worth of food, water and prescription medication as crews continue to work to get basic services restored.
     
    Crews have been working to get critical businesses such as banks, grocery stores and pharmacies running again. Supplies of some items may be limited in the beginning and the government says some things may need to be rationed.
     
    "We would not do this if it was not safe to do so," Couture said.
     
    The re-entry is happening in phases this week. Only people in the Lower Townsite, Anzac, Fort McMurray First Nation and Gregoire Lake Estates are being allowed to come back on Wednesday.
     
    The RCMP say they will have a helicopter in the air to monitor traffic and police kept a close watch on the speed of drivers as they headed home.
     
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley was planning to be in Fort McMurray when the first evacuees return.
     
    "It's not like, 'OK, you're home. See ya. Bye bye,'" she said.
     
    "We're still with them, and I think it's really important that they hear that from us."
     
    FORT MCMURRAY RE-ENTRY: WHAT DO RETURNING RESIDENTS NEED TO BRING?
     
     
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Wildfire evacuees have started returning to Fort McMurray, about a month after a huge wildfire forced more than 80,000 residents to flee. Officials have warned it won't be business as usual for a while. Here's what returning residents have been advised to bring with them:
     
    — Enough food, drinking water and prescription medication to last up to 14 days. A boil-water advisory continues to be in effect and stores are still being cleaned up and restocked.
     
    — N-95 dust masks to reduce smoke exposure. The masks are available at hardware stores and one per household will be included in the Canadian Red Cross cleaning kits available at information centres.
     
    — Appropriate clothing, including boots, long pants, a long-sleeved shirt and gloves.
     
    — A camera to document any damage for insurance purposes.
     
    — A flashlight, as some homes may not have power.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death
    Mark Smich continues his testimony today under cross-examination from the lawyer of his co-accused, Dellen Millard.

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog
    The Independent Investigations Office, the body that probes serious incidents involving police, issued a report saying the officer used reasonable force when she shot the 23-year-old man in a Safeway parking lot in December 2014.  

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident
    Snohomish County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Shari Ireton said Tony Clyde Reed, 49, crossed into the United States from Mexico and was arrested by U.S. Marshals.

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring
      Rangers filed a criminal complaint Monday against three members of the group known as High on Life SundayFundayz that accuses them of stepping onto a geothermal feature.

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report
    CALGARY — A new assessment of the economic impact of the Fort McMurray wildfires says close to $1 billion of oilsands production has been lost.

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier

      Seven people on the climate change leadership team have signed an open letter to Premier Christy Clark, saying the province is in "no position to delay or scale back efforts."

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier