RCMP ‘worst fears’ confirmed in wildfire Bodies of pair trapped by flames recovered near Lac du Bonnet; Whiteshell Provincial Park closing amid increased threat
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Two bodies were recovered from a wildfire-hit area northeast of Lac du Bonnet Wednesday, as officials warned the massive blazes that forced about 1,000 evacuations and destroyed properties wouldn’t be tamed easily in the coming days.
RCMP Supt. Chris Hastie said the bodies — believed to be a man and a woman — were found just off Wendigo Road when it was safe to search the area.
“It is believed they succumbed to injuries sustained in the wildfire,” Hastie said at a news conference in Lac du Bonnet. Autopsies were scheduled.
RCMP were aware two people were trapped by the fast-moving fire Tuesday, but extreme conditions prevented emergency personnel from reaching them.
“At the time, wildfire conditions were deplorable, and it did not provide any mechanism or any means for the police — or any first responder, for that matter — to access the site,” Hastie said.
“This has been an incredibly challenging time for the community, and no doubt today’s tragic news will make it even more difficult.”
Officers’ “worst fears” were confirmed when they visited the location at about 9:15 a.m. Wednesday, while the out-of-control blaze continued to affect other areas.
Hastie said RCMP had no additional reports of people being unaccounted for.
“This is a truly tragic event,” said Rural Municipality of Lac du Bonnet Reeve Loren Schinkel. “I want to say that we’re a very close-knit community here, and certainly the family, friends and loved ones that have been impacted by this have our profound sympathies at this news.”
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Manitoba RCMP East District Commander, Superintendent Chris Hastie, at a press conference outside the Lac du Bonnet RCMP detachment Wednesday afternoon, after the RCMP recovered two bodies just off Wendigo Road, in the RM of Lac du Bonnet.
Premier Wab Kinew said he was “deeply saddened.”
“My heart goes out to their loved ones,” he wrote on social media. “On behalf of the province, we’re committed to doing everything we can to support Manitobans during this difficult time.”
Mandatory evacuation orders were issued for Wendigo Road and other parts of the RM while hot, dry and windy conditions fuelled the fire.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS RM of Lac du Bonnet Reeve Loren Schinkel speaks to media at the press conference.
Earlier, Schinkel told the Free Press as many as 1,000 permanent and seasonal residents were forced to flee. He described Tuesday as a dark day for the RM.
“There are some truly horrific stories that I’ve heard, people being surrounded by flames,” he said before the two deaths were announced.
There were significant building losses in the Wendigo Beach area, Schinkel said.
The fire’s cause was listed as human in nature by the province. The blaze rapidly spread to 4,000 hectares as it was battled by firefighters, water bombers and at least one helicopter.
Water bombers were temporarily grounded for safety reasons Wednesday because a drone was being flown in restricted airspace, drawing a rebuke from officials and a warning that drone operators will face charges if caught.
A water bomber from Ontario helped fight fires in eastern Manitoba.
While at least 24 wildfires burned across the province, the “predominant concern” was the blaze near Lac du Bonnet due to “values at risk” and the fire’s behaviour, said Kristin Hayward, assistant deputy minister of the Manitoba Wildfire Service.
An unknown number of structures were destroyed by the fires.
Christine Stevens, assistant deputy minister of the Manitoba Emergency Management Organization, said all of Whiteshell Provincial Park will close Thursday morning.
A separate fire was out of control nearby along the Manitoba-Ontario boundary. The uncontrolled fire grew to more than 23,000 hectares, Ontario’s government said.
All communities in the park will be evacuated, with all full-time residents, commercial operators, cottagers and campers ordered out by 1 p.m.
The province said it took the step “out of an abundance of caution” due to the extreme fire threat in the region.
Swaths of cottage country will be off limits over the long weekend. Officials urged Manitobans to avoid fire-hit areas and heed fire bans and other warnings because conditions continue to evolve and they do not want people to get in the way of first responders.
Near Lac du Bonnet, three checkpoints were set up along Provincial Road 313 to ensure only emergency vehicles access the fire zone.
“We are very much in a live-response type of situation where we’re working to protect people, critical infrastructure and property,” Hayward said.
The suspected cause of almost every wildfire this season is human activity, the province said.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Christine Stevens, Assistant Deputy Minister, Manitoba Emergency Management Organization.
Challenging days are still ahead, Hayward warned.
Four other fires were out of control in Manitoba — near Nopiming Provincial Park, in the RM of Piney, west Libau and northwest of The Pas.
“We have hot, hot weather right now, we have dry conditions, we have had some very windy days, and we expect that to continue… into (Thursday),” Hayward said at a separate news conference in Winnipeg.
Periods of rain, expected through Friday along with cooler temperatures, may not bring desired relief to the front lines. Lightning remains a risk. Strong winds are expected again.
“There has been some mention of precipitation in the forecast, however, we are not seeing the forecasted amounts anywhere where we need them to be to extinguish the fires or make any appreciable difference in what those fires are doing,” Hayward said.
“We would need a good soaking rain. A couple of inches, a couple of days of rain to keep the humidity levels high, so we want to keep those kind of moist conditions happening. Lower temperatures, those would all help our fire situation.”
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Police officers block the road at Wendigo Road and Old Pointe Road, Wednesday.
Lightning sparked the fire near Nopiming on Monday. It had spread to 100,000 hectares and was considered unsafe to fight Tuesday.
“What we saw with the fire near Nopiming was extremely volatile fire behaviour, that it isn’t even safe to be actioning a fire of that volatility,” Hayward said.
“The decision was made to focus on Lac du Bonnet, where it was safer for us to respond and there was, obviously, a public-safety risk that we wanted to address.”
Nopiming, Wallace Lake, South Atikaki and Manigotagan River provincial parks were evacuated Tuesday.
Similar orders were in place for parts of the municipalities of Alexander and Piney, and three northern affairs communities (Bissett, Rockey Lake East and the Wallace Lake Cottage Association).
Stevens said 24 cottage subdivisions were affected.
Six states of local emergency were declared.
Manitoba Hydro evacuated its Pointe du Bois and Slave Falls generating stations on the Winnipeg River because fires threatened to cut off road access.
The shutdown will result in a loss of about 70 megawatts of generating capacity, but it will not affect service to customers because other generating facilities can compensate, the Crown corporation said.
In the RM of Piney, a fire southeast of Woodridge grew to about 7,000 hectares. Crews were setting up fire guards and sprinklers at homes and other properties threatened by fire.
At least two structures were destroyed, the RM said in a news release.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Emergency vehicles leave the closed zone on Lee River Road, Wednesday.
Firefighters from B.C. arrived in Manitoba last week to aid the battle. While Manitoba always looks at what resources are available across Canada, the current focus is “responding in the moment with what we have on hand,” Hayward said.
She told reporters this isn’t a normal fire season.
“Typically, we wouldn’t be seeing a lot of this level of activity happening until later on in the summer,” she said. “We are seeing that our seasons are starting a lot earlier. We’re out on the landscape fighting forest fires probably a month earlier than historically we would be used to.”
Weather patterns and the amount of moisture headed into the season are among the factors.
“We have had a number of years where we’ve had dry conditions in the fall that don’t lead to a lot of recharge in our watersheds,” Hayward said.
Wildfire smoke prompted an air-quality warning for eastern Manitoba and some central and southern areas, including Winnipeg.
— With files from Scott Billeck
chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca
Evacuations continue
These areas were among those evacuated as of Wednesday, the province said
- South Whiteshell Provincial Park: Caddy Lake; Green Bay Resort; West Hawk Lake including McDougall’s Landing, Big Island and Indian Bay; Florence Lake, Nora Lake and Ophir Siding.
- North Whiteshell Provincial Park: Crowduck Lake including Crowduck Lake Camp; Big Whiteshell Lake including all cottage blocks and campgrounds.
- Pointe du Bois.
- Nopiming Provincial Park.
- Wallace Lake Provincial Park.
- South Atikaki Provincial Park.
- Manigotagan River Provincial Park.
- RM of Alexander: Sunset Bay; Pinawa Bay; and Poplar Bay.
- RM of Piney: Badger; Carrick; St. Labre; and Florze.
- RM of Lac du Bonnet: Wendigo Road; Grausdin Point subdivisions; Cape Coppermine Road from Lagsdin Way, including all adjoining subdivisions.
- Rocky Lake East
- Wallace Lake Cottage Association
- Bissett
Couldn’t get through to 911
An MLA from an area of southeastern Manitoba battling wildfires said a constituent’s building burned down Tuesday night after there was no response to 911 calls reporting it.
“A neighbour of mine unfortunately lost a structure on their property after the neighbour had attempted to call 911 a number of times, didn’t get through and got put on hold,” said Konrad Narth, the member for LaVerendrye.
“It wasn’t until the neighbour had reached out to the fire chief on a personal cellphone that they were able to dispatch the local fire department to that scene,” Narth told reporters after the issue was raised in the Manitoba legislature during question period Wednesday.
House leader Derek Johnson asked how many 911 calls are not getting through to the rural emergency call centre in Brandon, but did not get a direct answer.
Narth told reporters his neighbour saw the fire creep across a section of pastureland up to another neighbour’s property near Zhoda.
He said the fire destroyed an outbuilding not far from the family’s home. The fire department was able to attend before the fire spread.
“It’s concerning for my constituency right now being under immediate risk of active wildfires — as people’s homes are under threat, that they won’t be able to access 911 services.”
Late Wednesday, the PCs issued a statement offering condolences to the families of the man and woman who lost their lives in wildfires near Lac du Bonnet, as well as thanks to the firefighters “working tirelessly to protect homes and lives.”
“Thank you for your bravery, your hard work, and your commitment to keeping Manitoba safe during this crisis,” it said.
Flood watch
The province has issued a flood watch for parts of southwestern Manitoba.
The areas include lands south of the Trans-Canada Highway between Brandon and Virden and communities west of Highway 10, including Souris, Melita and Boissevain.
A weather system could bring more than 80 millimetres of rain to the areas between Wednesday and Friday, the province said in a news release.
Heavy rainfall over a short period might create high surface runoff. That could lead to overland flooding, regardless of the current moisture condition of the soil. Burn bans are in effect in some of the areas.
Other regions of Manitoba, including the southern, central and northern regions, could get 20-70 mm of rain.
The weather system is expected to bring high winds from Thursday afternoon until Friday evening. That might result in high-wind effects along the south basin of Lake Manitoba, as well as on Lake Winnipeg shorelines near Gimli on the west side and at Victoria Beach on the east side.
North winds gusting up to 80 km/h and the resulting waves could increase water levels by as much as 1.5 metres (five feet) or more, the province said.
Chris Kitching is a general assignment reporter at the Free Press. He began his newspaper career in 2001, with stops in Winnipeg, Toronto and London, England, along the way. After returning to Winnipeg, he joined the Free Press in 2021, and now covers a little bit of everything for the newspaper. Read more about Chris.
Every piece of reporting Chris produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
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