Canoe Narrows, Sask., under full wildfire evacuation order for 2nd time this year

Windwhistler
3 Min Read
Canoe Narrows, Sask., under full wildfire evacuation order for 2nd time this year

SaskatchewanAnother northern Saskatchewan community is now under a full evacuation order due to growing wildfire danger. Residents of Canoe Narrows, part of the Canoe Lake Cree First Nation, were instructed to leave the community by 7 a.m. CST Wednesday morning.Community members told to leave by 7 a.m. Wednesday, head to Fort SaskatchewanJeffery Tram · CBC News · Posted: Jul 16, 2025 1:19 PM EDT | Last Updated: 3 hours agoWildfire smoke spotted near Beauval, Sask,. located on the other side of Highway 155, where Canoe Narrows is under a full evacuation. (Submitted by Rick Laliberte)Another northern Saskatchewan community is now under a full evacuation order due to growing wildfire danger.Priority residents of Canoe Narrows, part of the Canoe Lake Cree First Nation located about 350 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon, were instructed to leave the community by 7 a.m. CST Wednesday in a Facebook post on Tuesday night by Michelle Morin, a resident and emergency management response co-ordinator. The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency (SPSA) expanded the order overnight to include all residents. Poor internet connection? CBC Lite is our low-bandwidth website. This marks the second time Canoe Narrows has had to evacuate this year due to wildfires.Morin said evacuees are being directed to Fort Saskatchewan, Alta., where registration will take place at the Wingate and Hampton Inn hotels.Neighbouring Jans Bay remains under a full evacuation order as well due to the nearby Trail Fire, which is burning just south of both communities.A screenshot taken at 9:30 a.m. CST Wednesday of NASA’s Fire Information for Resource Management System US/Canada map. (NASA FIRMS US/Canada)According to the SPSA, there were 49 active wildfires in the province as of 10 a.m. CST Wednesday, with seven considered contained.The SPSA said 40 firefighters from Australia have arrived to support Saskatchewan’s wildfire response, and another 40 from Mexico are expected later this week. They join crews from across Canada and the United States, including help from Quebec, British Columbia, Alaska, and several U.S. states.”Saskatchewan is grateful to everyone who has helped with the unprecedented wildfire season,” SPSA vice president of operations Steve Roberts said in a news release. “Thank you to everyone local and abroad for the immense support in the air and on the ground.”Up-to-date info on active fires, smoke and related topics is available at these sources: Current evacuation orders. Interactive Sask. active fire map. Fire danger map. Fire bans. Environment and Climate Change Canada weather alerts. Sask. Highway Hotline. Smoke forecast. Air quality. Tracking wildfires across Canada. ABOUT THE AUTHORJeffery is a reporter with CBC Saskatchewan in Regina. He previously worked at CBC Toronto as an associate producer. You can reach him at jeffery.tram@cbc.ca.

Share This Article
x  Powerful Protection for WordPress, from Shield Security
This Site Is Protected By
Shield Security