Mixture of loss, hope for Canadian town hit by wildfire

May 10, 2016
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. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)

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. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)

FORT MCMURRAY, Alberta (AP) — Charred bicycles lean on a fence in front of incinerated townhomes. Just across the street, a school and playground are untouched.

Across this Canadian oil sand town, the contrast is repeated: neighborhoods that burned to their foundations, while other neighborhoods, strip malls, car dealerships, schools and hospitals are still standing.

Nearly a week after people started evacuating Fort McMurray as a massive wildfire surrounded them, more than 40 journalists were allowed into the city Monday on a bus escorted by police, as the forest surrounding the road into town still smoldered.

The first neighborhood seen, Beacon Hill, was an example of the worst a fire can do.

At one lot, a barbecue sat in the driveway, a few feet away from a charred pickup truck, its wheels melted into the ground, the debris surrounding them the scattered components of what was once a house.

Lot by lot the scene is repeated: homes burned to their foundation and reduced to rubble.

A short drive away, nearly an entire trailer park community is burned to the ground, the exception a single line of homes in the last row.

Fort McMurray Fire Chief Darby Allen said that he knew residents were likely watching media reports to find out the status of their neighborhoods. He briefly choked up while saying he wanted them to know that emergency responders “gave their all.”

“We did our very best,” he said.

Even with all of the personal loss, nearly 90 percent of the city is still standing, including the downtown. Allen said that the fire got as close as the corner of a bank, but firefighters were able to fight back the flames. If that had not been successful, he said, downtown would have been lost.

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.

Fort McMurray “is a home you are going to return to,” she promised residents at a news conference Monday.

Those 80,000 residents are scattered throughout the province, some staying at evacuation centers, others with family and friends.

Randy MacKenzie was filling up his gas tank at Wandering River Monday night, heading south to Redwater, Alberta, with eight dogs in kennels in his truck and an attached trailer.

MacKenzie, who owns a boarding kennel in Fort McMurray, fled during the evacuation last week with 56 dogs that were at the kennel at the time the mandatory evacuation order came down. He had friends in a safe area keep his four dogs.

Monday, he was allowed back in to pick up his dogs as well as other dogs that belonged to friends.

Though his boarding kennel was in an area that was saved by firefighters, his home was in Beacon Hill.

MacKenzie hasn’t been back to the neighborhood, which is still under the mandatory evacuation order, but he knows what he’ll find when officials allow residents to return.

“I know my house is gone,” he said.

Bicycles lean against a fence in front of burned townhouses in Fort McMurray, Alberta, following a massive wildfire, 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. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)

Bicycles lean against a fence in front of burned townhouses in Fort McMurray, Alberta, following a massive wildfire, 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. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)