Residents of hardest-hit Fort McMurray neighbourhoods still waiting to return - Action News
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Residents of hardest-hit Fort McMurray neighbourhoods still waiting to return

The neighbourhoods of Abasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways were originally scheduled to reopen today, but they remain off-limits for safety reasons until June 8.

Residents from Abasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways asked to start return on June 8 with supervised visits only

A Mountie waves to traffic heading into Fort McMurray on Saturday morning, the fourth day of the scheduled re-entry. (CBC/Terry Reith)

Saturday was the day residents fromAbasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways theneighbourhoodshardest-hit by the wildfire in Fort McMurray were originally scheduled to return to their homes.

But as people from other neighbourhoods were greeted by wavingfirefighters and a Mountie in red serge Saturday morning, residents fromAbasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways were still waiting for a chance to return.

On May 31, they were told their re-entry would be delayed due to safety concerns, and that they might have to wait until September to come back home.

On Friday, officials released a property visit schedule that will allowsupervised visits for residents of these neighbourhoods, starting June 8.

Residents who have lost their homes in these restricted neighbourhoods will be able to survey the damage at that time.

Escorted visits to destroyed homes outside of these restricted neighbourhoods will begin June 5.

Residents aren't allowedto visit destroyed homeson their own. Once inside these neighbourhoods, they can ask tobe accompanied by members of an NGO group called Team Rubicon who can sift through the rubble for their belongings.

Despite the delay in return to the hardest-hit areas, officials say the re-entry is moving along as planned.

A Mercedes Benz covered in dried tackifier sits next to a flattened home in Crescent Heights. (Terry Reith/CBC)

Chemical to keep ash from flying

The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo is working in the hardesthit neighbourhood to apply tackifier, a powder that dries to a hard shell. It's used to cover the toxic ash and prevent it from blowing into the air.

Workers have finished applying tackifier to structures in Waterways and have covered about 35 per cent of destroyed areas in Abasand. Work started on Beacon Hill on Thursday.

On Wednesday, the first day of re-entry, only 8,000 of the 13,000 residents eligible to return to the city came back. The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, which includes Fort McMurray, estimated upward of 20,000 of the possible 40,000 eligible residents returned on Thursday.

On Friday, people in Zones 3 and 4A began their return. This included the neighbourhoods of Prairie Creek, Wood Buffalo, Gregoire, Sapare Creek and Thickwood. About 22,000 residents were eligible to return, but officials expected only about half would do so.

Returning residents are still urged to bring enough food, water, fuel and medication to last up to two weeks as services in the city remain limited.

More than 30,000 detailed information booklets have been delivered to homes around the city. They contain essential cleanup and safety information and all returning residents are urged to read them.

No rush for man who lost home

Rick Brown lived with his family in the Waterways neighbourhood. His house was destroyed by the fire, so he's in no rush to get back.

"Our place got wiped out, someone sent us a text the other day," said Brown. "They've coated it with some white chemical or somethingand it's all fenced off. So essentially we can go watch and that's it."

"It is what it is, we can't do anything about it, so we just gotta move on."

On Wednesday, the first day of re-entry, only 8,000 of the 13,000 residents eligible to return to the city came back. (CBC/Terry Reith)

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said residents of Abasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways would be able to return June 10. The correct date is June 8.
    Jun 04, 2016 1:05 PM MT