Emergency management pushed to the edge in wildfire disaster
It what was an unprecedented and record-breaking wildfire season, the province’s commissioner of emergency management says it showed how quickly the province could respond to a disaster of that magnitude.
“We combined all government services into one command but what we are facing is continual increase in the scope of disasters and as we look at the impact it’s incumbent on us to continue to reach out and look at all the capabilities that we need to draw in in these situations,” Duane McKay said.
Speaking on the final day of the Saskatchewan emergency planning association conference in Saskatoon, McKay said this summer’s wildfires pushed emergency services and planner to the brink, forcing the province to rely on towns and cities to help out, which they did.
“With the wildfires, the scope of what we saw, Saskatchewan did need to reach out to its First Nations and municipalities and ask for assistance and ultimately to the federal government and we need to make sure we have the ability to reach out and draw resources in,” he said.


