‘Imminent danger’: Leaf Rapids issues evacuation order as Manitoba wildfire situation escalates again

Lightning strikes triggered a sudden escalation of wildfires in Manitoba — prompting the evacuation of Leaf Rapids and declaration of a state of local emergency in Thompson — while the number of active blazes surpassed 80 on Monday.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 07/07/2025 (307 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Lightning strikes triggered a sudden escalation of wildfires in Manitoba — prompting the evacuation of Leaf Rapids and declaration of a state of local emergency in Thompson — while the number of active blazes surpassed 80 on Monday.

Leaf Rapids residents were ordered to leave by 10 a.m. Tuesday as Thompson’s emergency was declared as a precaution in case conditions worsen.

“We’ve had a lot of lightning go through the province. We were seeing over 25 new fires every 24-hour period,” Kristin Hayward, assistant deputy minister of the Manitoba Wildfire Service, said Monday.

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                                About 120 Pimicikamak Cree Nation residents have been moved to Winnipeg as a precaution due to wildfire smoke.

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About 120 Pimicikamak Cree Nation residents have been moved to Winnipeg as a precaution due to wildfire smoke.

Raging blazes

There were 81 active fires in Manitoba as of Monday afternoon, as per the province. They include these fires of note.

There were 81 active fires in Manitoba as of Monday afternoon, as per the province. They include these fires of note.

East region

Fire EA061

Status: Out of control

Size: About 230,680 hectares

The blaze has grown by about 3,000 hectares in recent days, spreading north into South Atikaki Provincial Park. Most of Nopiming Provincial Park is closed. Provincial Road 315 is open with access to Bird Lake, Booster Lake, Flanders Lake and Davidson Lake. Wallace Lake and South Atikaki provincial parks are closed.

West region

Fire WE017

Status: Out of control

Size: About 370,780 hectares

Crews continue to work on Manitoba’s largest fire, near Flin Flon and Sherridon. Boaters are asked to avoid waterways that are being used by Manitoba Wildfire Service aircraft, including water bombers.

Fire WE025

Status: Being monitored

Size: About 59,220

The blaze around Mathias Colomb Cree Nation (Pukatawagan) is contained. A mandatory evacuation order remains in place due to a power outage.

Fire WE028

Status: Out of control

Size: About 7,200 hectares

The fire is about 10 kilometres southwest of Bakers Narrows Provincial Park.

Fire WE052

Status: Out of control

Size: About 2,690 hectares

The fire is 24 km southwest of Snow Lake.

Fire WE053

Status: Out of control

Size: About 1,120 hectares

The blaze is 16 km northeast of Snow Lake.

Fire WE059

Status: Under control

Size: About four hectares

The blaze, one of three in the Snow Lake area, is about 12 km southwest of the town.

North region

Fire NO002

Status: Out of control

Size: About 80,120 hectares

The fire has been burning near Lynn Lake since early May.

Fire NO005

Status: Out of control

Size: About 80,080 hectares

The fire is near Pimicikamak Cree Nation, the incorporated community of Cross Lake, Jenpeg Generating Station and Whiskey Jack Landing.

Fire NO010

Status: Being held

Size: About 22,275 hectares

The fire is located near Tataskweyak Cree Nation (Split Lake). The community’s chief and council said at least seven homes were destroyed when the blaze flared up Friday.

Fire NO026

Status: Out of control

Size: About 5,165 hectares

The fire is 14 km southwest of Leaf Rapids, where a mandatory evacuation order will go into effect Tuesday morning. Although the fire was less active in recent days due to small amounts of rain, it is expected to pick up as warmer and drier conditions return, the province said.

Fire NO042

Status: Out of control

Size: About 9,525 hectares

The fire is 14 km southwest of Lynn Lake. The blaze could knock out power to Lynn Lake and Marcel Colomb First Nation (Black Sturgeon Falls) if it damages a Manitoba Hydro transmission line. A mandatory evacuation order is in place as a result.

Fire NO047

Status: Out of control

Size: About 2,000 hectares

The fire is 26 km east of Leaf Rapids. The blaze has the potential to affect a power line services O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation, the province said.

Fire NO055

Status: Out of control

Size: About 3,000 hectares

The fire is 12 km north of Pimicikamak Cree Nation (Cross Lake).

Fire NO061

Status: Out of control

Size: About 5,900 hectares

The blaze is located 14 km north of Thompson. The City of Thompson declared a state of local emergency as a precaution Monday.

Fire NO076

Status: Out of control

Size: About 44 hectares

The fire is seven km east of Wabowden.

“When lightning strikes, it can take three to five days, sometimes even longer, for that smoke to pop up, so that’s what we’re dealing with now, a lot of starts from lightning, and more forecast on the horizon, unfortunately.”

The province said 81 fires were active as of Monday afternoon. Most were in the northern region.

The 20-year average at this time of year is 187 fires. Manitoba has recorded 235 fires in 2025, with more than one million hectares of land — an area 21 times the size of Winnipeg — being burned.

Hayward said 16 active fires were near communities or had the potential to affect them if conditions changed.

Thompson was on alert while a roughly 6,000-hectare fire, caused by lightning and detected Friday, burned about 15 kilometres north of the city.

“At this time, based on the current conditions, the work that we’re doing and the forecast conditions, we don’t expect Thompson to be in immediate danger over the next couple of days, at least,” Hayward said.

Crews were using bulldozers to build fire guards to protect the city. Sprinklers were set up at Thompson’s airport.

The province is preparing in case at least parts of Thompson have to evacuate, said Christine Stevens, assistant deputy minister of the Manitoba Emergency Management Organization. Staff are looking at hotel options within and outside Manitoba.

Thompson was home to 13,000 people as of the 2021 census.

“We were seeing over 25 new fires every 24-hour period.”–Kristin Hayward

Stevens said Manitoba was not considering another provincewide state of emergency as of Monday because it had the “resources and tools” it needed to respond to the situation. A previous state of emergency triggered federal aid.

In Leaf Rapids, 328 residents are expected to leave the small community. Some will travel about 975 kilometres to Winnipeg on buses.

The Town of Leaf Rapids, which is under provincial administration, said in a Facebook post it was advised a wildfire posed “imminent danger” to life and property.

Hayward said a roughly 5,100-hectare blaze, about 14 km southwest of Leaf Rapids, is expected to pick up again as warmer and drier conditions return. The fire, detected June 27, was caused by lightning.

Stevens said a soccer complex on Leila Avenue in Winnipeg, which was previously used as a shelter, will reopen as a reception centre Tuesday. It can be used as a shelter again, if required, she said.

Heavy smoke prompted O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation (South Indian Lake), northeast of Leaf Rapids, to relocate residents who have breathing or medical conditions.

Manitoba had more than 6,600 wildfire evacuees as of Monday, down from a mid-June peak of more than 22,000. Canadian Armed Forces members helped evacuate some communities last month.

Six communities or populated areas remain evacuated: Lynn Lake, Marcel Colomb First Nation (Black Sturgeon Falls), Mathias Colomb Cree Nation (Pukatawagan), parts of Nopiming Provincial Park, Tataskweyak Cree Nation (Split Lake) and the Wallace Lake cottage association.

Lynn Lake and Marcel Colomb have evacuated twice since late May. The latest was prompted by a potential power outage.

Tataskweyak was preparing to repatriate evacuees when a fire flared up Friday, destroying at least seven homes.

“People are feeling tired and getting frustrated with the fires and the smoke.”–Chief David Monias

Nearly 120 residents of Pimicikamak Cree Nation — those with breathing or medical conditions, and some families — have left since the weekend due to heavy smoke from nearby fires, Chief David Monias said.

Evacuation orders

Mandatory evacuation orders have been issued for the following communities or areas:

Mandatory evacuation orders have been issued for the following communities or areas:

  • Burge Lake Provincial Park
  • Leaf Rapids (order takes effect Tuesday at 10 a.m.)
  • Lynn Lake
  • Mantario wildnerness area in Whiteshell Provincial Park
  • Marcel Colomb First Nation (Black Sturgeon Falls)
  • Mathias Colomb Cree Nation (Pukatawagan)
  • Nopiming Provincial Park: Most of the park is closed, except the northwest corner, including Quesnel Lake, and the southern areas of Bird, Booster, Flanders and Davidson lakes (for permanent residents, cottagers and commercial operators).
  • South Atikaki Provincial Park
  • Tataskweyak Cree Nation (Split Lake)
  • Wallace Lake Provincial Park

Voluntary or medical evacuations are taking place in at least two communities, which are not under mandatory evacuation orders:

  • O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation (South Indian Lake)
  • Pimicikamak Cree Nation (Cross Lake)
  • Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation (Nelson House) said Sunday that Priority 1 residents of the community’s personal care home will be transferred to their designated placements “as soon as appropriate facilities have been secured.”

 

Monias said 60 hotel rooms in Winnipeg were set aside for the evacuees.

The entire community of more than 7,500 people was evacuated for about three weeks until June 16.

“People are feeling tired and getting frustrated with the fires and the smoke. Of course, nobody wants to leave home,” Monias said.

Hayward said crews were looking for spot fires associated with a roughly 3,000-hectare blaze north of Pimicikamak and the incorporated community of Cross Lake. The blaze was caused by lightning and was detected Thursday.

A separate fire, at more than 80,000 hectares, led to intermittent closures of Provincial Road 373, the only road in and out for residents of those communities and Norway House Cree Nation. The fire was caused by human activity. It was detected May 20.

Many active fires are within the boundaries of federal Northern and Arctic Affairs Minister Rebecca Chartrand’s riding of Churchill—Keewatinook Aski.

Chartrand said she and a team of constituency officers are in contact with local and provincial leaders, including Premier Wab Kinew, in case federal government is needed.

She said she has told the premier Ottawa is “on standby.”

SUPPLIED
                                This wildfire south of Pimicikamak Cree Nation and the incorporated community of Cross Lake is one of several burning in the area.

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This wildfire south of Pimicikamak Cree Nation and the incorporated community of Cross Lake is one of several burning in the area.

“We want to make sure that people are feeling heard, and that they’re getting the support that they need,” the MP said.

In eastern Manitoba, the primary concern is still a massive blaze stretching from Bird River, throughout Nopiming Provincial Park and to areas east of Bissett.

The fire, detected May 12 after a lightning strike, has grown by about 3,000 hectares — spreading into South Atikaki Provincial Park — since last week.

Hayward said the blaze is active mainly on the north side, but there is some intensity around Beresford Lake. Some cottages were previously destroyed in the Beresford area.

Hayward said 137 structures across Manitoba have been confirmed destroyed by wildfires this year.

with files from Nicole Buffie

chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca

Chris Kitching

Chris Kitching
Reporter

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.

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History

Updated on Monday, July 7, 2025 1:54 PM CDT: Adds quotes, details, list of evacuation orders.

Updated on Monday, July 7, 2025 5:40 PM CDT: Adds details, comments, photos

Updated on Monday, July 7, 2025 5:43 PM CDT: Adds details

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