Baby Briar: Fort McMurray newborn named after CBC reporter - Action News
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Baby Briar: Fort McMurray newborn named after CBC reporter

A baby girl, born just days after her parents were forced to flee a wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., will forever bear the name of a CBC reporter who helped document the disaster from the front lines.

'We had a boy's name ... but still hadn't settled on a girl's name, and we kept hearing Briar on the news'

CBC reporter Briar Stewart met newborn baby Briar Thursday morning in the CBC Edmonton newsroom. (CBC)

A baby girl, born just days after her parents were forced to flee a wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., will forever bear the name of a CBC reporter who helped document the disaster from the front lines.

Fort McMurray couple names baby after CBC's Briar Stewart

8 years ago
Duration 1:19
During the commotion of evacuating Fort McMurray, Bill Briscoe and a pregnant Ninna Forte kept hearing the name Briar Stewart over and over. They liked the name so much, they decided to name their daughter after her.

As Bill Briscoe andNinna Forte fled the flames, thoughts of their unborn baby were at the forefront of their minds.

Forte's due date was weeksaway as they drove down Highway 63, unsure of whether theirnorthern Alberta city would survive the ravages of the fire.

"We were just talking about things that you're seeing around you;the fire, the people in the ditches, the things that people were carrying on the backs of trucks, like boxes full of memories,"said Forte.

"And then we started to talk about things that were going to start happening,like our baby coming right away."

That discussion was a welcome distraction from the pandemonium that surrounded them.

"We had a boy's name picked out, but still hadn't settled on a girl's name," said Forte."And we kept hearing Briar on the news. Briar Stewart."

A veteran CBC broadcaster, Stewart had travelled to Fort McMurrayjust hours before the flames breached city limits, forcing more than 90,000 residents to evacuate their homes.

Edmonton reporters share stories of wildfire coverage

8 years ago
Duration 2:20
Edmonton-based reporters Briar Stewart and Marion Warnica describe the delicate balance of reporting on the fire while staying out of harm's way.

Briscoe saidas the hours on the highway dragged on, and the sound of CBC radio broadcasts filled their car with fire news,the name Briarseemed the perfect choice for their baby girl.

"I always liked that name, and I heard it on the radio, and it kind of stuck," said Briscoe, who admits he's an avid fan of the public broadcaster. "I read the CBC website almost every day If I get my news anywhere, I probably get it from the CBC."

Fifteen days after the evacuation on May 18Briar Adele Briscoe was born, healthy, howling and blissfully unaware of the chaos that surrounded her arrival into the world.

Briar Adele Briscoe, born on May 18, after her parents fled the flames of Fort McMurray, was named after CBC reporter Briar Stewart. (Supplied )

"She's pretty awesome," said Forte. "She does most things that a one-week-old would do. Eat and sleep, and poop and pee, but she's pretty awesome."

Briscoe saidhe will have no qualms about telling his daughter about the origin of her name. His own childhood was filled with stories about the wildfire in Red Lake, Ont.

"When I was a kid in 1980, we were evacuated from my hometown by Hercules. They flew us all out of there."

"My parents always talked about that experience, I was too young to remember it, but now I'll be able to share a similar story with our daughter."

For her part, when Stewart heard about how Briar Adele got her name, it warmed her heart.

"I see it as the highest compliment, and am so happy that they appreciated our coverage during what surely would have been a chaotic time for their growing family.

"I am biased, but I think the baby's name is beautiful,and obviously adorable."

CBC reporter Briar Stewart, right, was in Fort McMurray as a massive wildfire breached city limits, and forced thousands of people to flee for their lives. (Terry Reith/CBC )