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Metis settlement looks to rebuild from wildfire as hot weather to return to Alberta

Click to play video: 'Indigenous community near High Prairie feels left behind in Alberta wildfire response'
Indigenous community near High Prairie feels left behind in Alberta wildfire response
WATCH ABOVE: (From May 9, 2023) East Prairie Metis Settlement, located near High Prairie in the Slave Lake region, is focusing on a rebuilding after nearly 30 homes burned. But the province's wildfire response has left the Indigenous community feeling left behind. Morgan Black explains – May 9, 2023

A Metis settlement devastated by an out-of-control blaze remains at risk as hot and dry conditions in Alberta’s forecast threaten to worsen an already intense wildfire season.

“That fire, I call it the devil. I’ve never seen a fire like that in my life,” said Raymond Supernault, chair of the East Prairie Metis Settlement.

“I never seen a fire like that come that quick and fast and go through the settlement and burn everything in its sight.”

Driving through the settlement around 165 kilometres east of Grande Prairie, the ground is charred black, electrical poles look like matchsticks and 14 homes were consumed by the inferno.

Around 80 per cent of the community was touched by the blaze in some way or another. It’s an overwhelming loss for the community of around 300, Supernault said.

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Family pictures, heirlooms and important history for the Metis families vanished in ash. A bridge needed by some families to return home was also destroyed.

The settlement is not out of the woods yet. Temperatures in the high 20s and low to mid-30s are expected in some areas over the coming days, with daytime highs soaring up to 15 degrees above normal.

“That’s going to be hot. The fires will start rising again,” Supernault said. “That’s the scary part.”

Click to play video: 'Wildfire devastates East Prairie Metis Settlement in northern Alberta'
Wildfire devastates East Prairie Metis Settlement in northern Alberta

There were 74 active wildfires in the province around midday Friday, including 20 out of control.

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Alberta Premier Danielle Smith was in Grande Prairie on Friday surveying the fire zone and meeting with local officials and Indigenous leaders.

About 300 members of the Canadian Armed Forces are being deployed to help battle the blazes over the next few days. About 100 of those soldiers will be sent to the area around Grand Prairie and the settlement.

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The help will be a reprieve for community members after the fire rapidly tore through the East Prairie Metis Settlement a week ago.

People were given an hour to flee. Supernault said within around seven hours, the community was destroyed.

A provincial state of emergency was put in place the following day.

“I never thought I’d have to see something like this in my lifetime,” Supernault said

Some community members stayed behind to save what they could. The settlement has a long history of firefighting. Supernault said they are also slashers, equipment operators and truck drivers who had skills to save as many homes as possible.

“We always fought fire growing up, that used to be our source of work,” said Brad Desjarlais, who stayed behind to help.

The spruce, muskeg, poplar trees and dry grass lit up quickly as locals did what they could on the ground to keep the flames away from homes, Desjarlais explained.

A small amount of rain this week helped their efforts, but he said hot spots remain.

The Alberta government has announced it will join the federal government in a donation-matching program with the Canadian Red Cross that would see every $1 donated become $3.

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Supernault said it’s difficult for the Metis settlement to navigate the jurisdictional issues between the province and federal government when it comes to getting help and funding. They will need to rebuild homes, put up power poles and repair the bridge _ all with a significant price tag.

East Prairie is one of eight Metis settlements in the province. It is land-based and self-governing, but not the same as a First Nation reserve.

Elders have often talked about how hard it was when they first came to the area, Supernault said. They were called “roadside people” and lived in tar shacks.

Their forbearers made their permanent home on this land in the 1930s, Supernault said.

“They built it for us and we have to make sure we take care of it,” Supernault said.

“No matter how burnt it is, the green grass is going to come back. the houses will come back.”

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