Alberta Premier Rachel Notley speaks to members of the media at a fire station in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Monday, May 9, 2016. A break in the weather has officials optimistic they have reached a turning point on getting a handle on the massive wildfire. |
FORT
MCMURRAY, Alberta (AP) -- At least two neighborhoods in this oil
sands city were scenes of utter devastation with incinerated homes
leveled to the ground from a wildfire that Fort McMurray's fire chief
called a "beast ... a fire like I've never seen in my life."
But
the wider picture was more optimistic as Fire Chief Darby Allen said 85
percent of Canada's main oil sands city remains intact, including the
downtown district. Alberta's premier declared the city had been saved,
adding that officials hope to provide a schedule within two weeks for
thousands of evacuated residents to begin returning to their homes.
Alberta
Premier Rachel Notley said about 2,400 homes and buildings were
destroyed in the city, but firefighters managed to save 25,000 others,
including the hospital, municipal buildings and every functioning
school.
"This city was surrounded by an ocean
of fire only a few days ago but Fort McMurray and the surrounding
communities have been saved and they will be rebuilt," Notley said.
Notley
got her first direct look at the devastation in Fort McMurray on Monday
after cold temperatures and light rain had stabilized the massive
wildfire to a point where officials could begin planning to get
thousands of evacuated residents back.
The
break in the weather left officials optimistic they've reached a turning
point on getting a handle on the massive wildfire. The temperature
dipped to 45 degrees Fahrenheit (7 degrees Celsius) on Monday following a
week where the region had unseasonably warm temperatures.
Notley
flew in Monday morning to meet with local officials and took a ground
tour of the town before holding a news conference at the emergency
center.
"I was very much struck by the
devastation of the fire. It was really quite overwhelming in some
spots," Notley said. "But I will also say that I was struck by the
proximity of that devastation to neighborhoods that were untouched."
More
than 40 journalists were allowed into Fort McMurray on a bus escorted
by police. The forest surrounding the road into town was still
smoldering and there were abandoned cars. Only the sign remained at a
Super 8 Motel and Denny's restaurant on the edge of town.
The Beacon Hill neighborhood was a scene of utter devastation with homes burned down to their foundation.
Allen said at one point the fire jumped across a road in Beacon Hill that is 15 to 20 feet (4.5 to 6 meters) wide.
"It
jumped that without thinking about it. This was a beast. It was an
animal. It was a fire like I've never seen in my life," he said on the
media bus.
In the early stages of the fire he feared that as much as half the city could burn down.
"I
just want to let the people know that we're in pretty good shape," he
said. "Typical of the damaged areas you'll see structures that are
completely gone and structures that are intact."
Allen
said at one point the fire raced down a hill to the corner of a bank,
but firefighters were able to halt the encroaching flames at the bank.
Had they failed to stop it there, the fire would have destroyed the
downtown district, he said.
But other
neighborhoods were not spared. In the Abasand district, townhouses were
completely destroyed, and charred children's bikes could be seen in
backyards. A parking facility was burned to the ground.
More
than 88,000 people have left Fort McMurray since the fire broke out
last Tuesday in the heart of Canada's oil sands region. The bulk of the
city's evacuees moved south after Tuesday's mandatory evacuation order,
but 25,000 evacuees moved north and were housed in camps normally used
for oil sands workers until they also could be evacuated south.
Gas
has been turned off, the power grid is damaged and water is undrinkable
in Fort McMurray. More than 250 power company workers are trying to
restore the grid and assess the gas infrastructure.
"We are now turning our minds more and more to the recovery effort," Federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said.
"This
is going to be a long term endeavor because at the moment there is no
power and gas, no palatable
water supply. There's dangerous hazardous
material all over the place. It's going to take a very careful,
thoughtful effort to get that community back in a livable condition,"
Goodale said.
Notley said the fire still
continues to grow outside the city and now is about 787 square miles
(2,020 square kilometers) in size.
No deaths
or injuries have been reported from the fire itself. But the fire has
forced as much as a third of Canada's oil output offline and was
expected to impact an economy already hurt by the fall in oil prices.
"We're just beginning to become aware of the economic impacts," Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.
Alberta's
oil sands have the third-largest reserves of oil in the world behind
Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Its workers largely live in Fort McMurray, a
former frontier outpost-turned-city whose residents mostly come from
elsewhere in Canada.
Officials said the fire
didn't' reach the Suncor or Syncrude oil sands facilities north of Fort
McMurray, and that the oil mines to the north are not threatened. Notley
said there will be a meeting Tuesday with the energy industry to
discuss the state of the facilities and the impact on operations.
Suncor
said late Sunday it is beginning to implement its plan for a return to
operations. Analysts at Goldman Sachs estimated the wildfire has reduced
Canada's oil sands production by a million barrels per day, but said in
a note the lack of damage to the oil mines could allow for a fast ramp
up in production. They noted the complete evacuation of personnel and of
the city could point to a more gradual recovery.
Alberta
Health Services Dr. Chris Sikora said a viral stomach virus broke out
among 40 to 50 evacuees at the Northlands evacuation center in Edmonton
where 600 people are staying and where five to six thousand meals a day
are being prepared for the thousands of evacuees. Symptoms include
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. They were isolated.