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Threat on horizon: the fire looms close to the city and much will depend on the wind's behavior (Trevor Redden/paNOW Staff)
fire and hope

‘The fire is a monster’: P.A. Mayor says we’re at mercy of the weather as blaze rages northeast of city

May 17, 2021 | 9:22 PM

Calling it a ‘monster’ of a fire, the mayor of Prince Albert says he cannot say with any certainty how the uncontained blaze on the northeast edge of the city will play out Monday night or in the coming days.

Speaking on a media call Monday evening Greg Dionne called on the public to “pray for our people” and for the many crew and emergency personnel who would be working through the night and in the days to come to try to tackle the blaze.

The spread of the fire was apparent late Monday evening. (Submitted video/Curtis Wailing)

He also called on the public to stay away from the fire zone because the high winds could change at any moment and “we’ve had no loss of life” and he wants to keep it that way.

Ominous view: residents pull up at the sewer plant for a glance at the threat. (Teena Monteleone)

Dionne said Monday afternoon’s blaze had started in the RM of Buckland but high winds brought it across city boundaries. There is currently no known cause.

Asked what his confidence level was for the fire to be contained Dionne said: ”It’s a monster, the winds are fanning it. It’s making its own wind tunnels and it’s growing.

The billowing ‘monster’ creates a backdrop to P.A.’s Prime Ministers’ Park (submitted)

“We are sprinkling as many houses as we can but that’s not a guarantee we’ll stop it because it’s such a size.”

He estimated that size at around two and a half kilometres by two and a half kilometres.

On a level of one to 10 [in danger] Dionne labelled it “an eight.”

He said while the wind direction had been taking the fire away from the city on Monday that could all change very quickly with more gusting winds expected tonight and tomorrow.

“If the wind [direction] changes, we could be in for serious trouble,” he added.

Dionne speaks during a media conference Monday evening. (screenshot/ City of PA media conference)

Dionne said 95 per cent of the blaze was in wooded area, with only five per cent in acreages. There was no information on possible damage to property.

He added the Nisbet Forest had an abundance of deadwood on the ground and figured a fire like this was never a matter of if but when.

“What’s scary is tonight it’s only cooling off to 16 Celsius and tomorrow the wind picks up. We’re bringing in heavy equipment but we’re at the mercy of the weather. At this point it [the fire] is in control and so is the weather,” he explained.

Curtis Wailing has been providing paNOW pictures and videos from his deck throughout the day. This was the scene at 10:30 p.m. Monday night. (Submitted photo/Curtis Wailing)

Dionne said while the abilities of Saskatchewan’s firefighters was well known the blaze “is a monster and it’s getting bigger.”

glenn.hicks@pattisonmedia.com

Twitter: @princealbertnow

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