Ten years after fleeing her burning Fort McMurray neighbourhood through gridlocked traffic, Alexis Gale still finds herself packing a to-go bag as soon as the winter snow begins to melt.
For Gale, who lost her home during the 2016 Horse River Wildfire, the anniversary is a reminder of the confusion of the evacuation and the stress of rebuilding her home. The melting snow reminds her itâs time to be ready with her emergency supplies and important documents, just in case.
âThinking about it, itâs really hard and I get a lot of anxiety. ⦠I always feel like weâre in survival mode ever since the fire,â she said.
âItâs just a scar that weâre gonna always have. Weâre always gonna remember it, but people just have moved on in the sense of we have rebuilt our lives.â
Ready to move forward but mindful of what happened on May 3, 2016 is a sentiment shared by Mayor Sandy Bowman and the regionâs fire chief, Jody Butz.
The wildfire destroyed more than 2,560 dwellings, or 10 per cent of homes in Fort McMurray. More than 330 buildings were never rebuilt. An evacuation that lasted roughly a month scattered more than 88,000 residents across the province and country.
A decade later, the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo (RMWB) is attempting to balance a need for reflection with a desire shared by many residents to move forward.
âI donât think Iâm in any place to quantify what someoneâs mental health has been through in the last 10 years, but thereâs definitely residual effects,â Bowman said in an interview with CBC News.
For those who want to reflect on the disaster with others, the RMWB is organizing public gatherings in Fort McMurray and surrounding rural hamlets this month.
The first event is Sunday in Fort McMurray and includes spaces for storytelling, family games, guided nature walks and yoga.Â
It is being advertised as âa welcoming and respectful space where everyone can take part in a way that feels right for them.âÂ
âIf folks feel to come and share their story and reflect on it, but also not to ignore the fact itâs a milestone, hopefully we can use it as an opportunity to look forward,â said Butz.
âI really hope that in maybe 10 years, we can move forward and itâs not going to define us.â
Paul Daigle, who lost his home in the neighbourhood of Waterways, saw 90 per cent of homes in his neighbourhood destroyed in 2016.
Waterways was also flooded by an overflowing Clearwater River in 2013 and 2020. Daigle is more worried about the risk of flooding than wildfires. Heâs not happy with how governments responded to the wildfire in 2016, but says he does not want to dwell on the day.
âItâs gonna be a normal Sunday,â he said when asked how he will mark the wildfireâs 10th anniversary.
âYou gotta keep moving on. You gotta build from the ashes. You gotta move on and make it happen. Make your life happen.â
Butz says the best way to remember 2016 is to prepare for the future. The RMWB has spent more than $6.4 million clearing dead and dry trees and bushes that could spread wildfires.
Every neighbourhood and rural hamlet has emergency response plans customized to their geography and layout.
Fire officials also offer to inspect homes and give tips on how to keep their homes safe from fires. Theyâve responded to requests from more than 1,800 homeowners. Bowman says itâs common for leaders in other communities to ask the RMWB for advice on rebuilding from devastating wildfires.
When a wildfire south of Fort McMurray in 2024 caused an evacuation order of more than 6,600 people, the RMWB and the province were able to quickly form a unified response. This time, the wildfire never entered the city limits.
âNever let a disaster go to waste and we definitely took the opportunity to learn from that,â said Butz.
âI promise you, we will have a wildfire this year. I can’t tell you where or how the impact will be, but we are ready for the next wildfire that’s going to come this year and that’s the change.â










