'With open arms': How an inn is helping evacuees from Jean Marie River - Action News
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'With open arms': How an inn is helping evacuees from Jean Marie River

CBC spent a few hours at the Snowshoe Inn, one of two evacuation hubs for people from Jean Marie River, N.W.T., which was devastated by a spring flood.

All but 2 of the rooms at the Snowshoe Inn are filled with evacuees

Annette Mason, centre, helps evacuees from Jean Marie River at the front desk of the Snowshoe Inn in Fort Providence, N.W.T. (Travis Burke/CBC)

Annette Mason and the staff at Fort Providence's Snowshoe Inn in Northwest Territories started preparing for possible floodevacuees on May 7, when reports of flooding started coming from nearby Jean Marie River.

By Saturday night, it was "all hands on deck" for Mason, two volunteer staff and the handful of housekeepers at the inn, as evacuees started rolling in at all hours of the night.

"We just had to welcome them with open arms," Mason, the hotel's manager, told CBC.

Donation boxes in the lobby of the Snowshoe Inn in Fort Providence, N.W.T. (Anna Desmarais/CBC)

All but two of the hotel's rooms are taken up by residents of Jean Marie River, the community hardest hit by this year's spring flooding. Leadership in the community says the majority of their homes are damaged or destroyed from high water levels along with a fuel leak.

It's left many residents wondering if they'll have a community to go back to.

The first ones

The first people to walk through the Snowshoe's doors were Shaylyn and Kierstyn Hope, along with their mother Donna. The girls, aged 12 and 9 respectively, saw the waters rising from their quad. So, they told Stanley Sanguez, the chief, and the community's SAO about what they found.

After that, it was a mad rush to get out.

Kierstyn Hope, left, and Shaylyn Hope, right, talk about how they found some of the first signs of high water levels at their home in Jean Marie River, N.W.T. (Travis Burke/CBC)

"We packed our bags but there wasn't enough time because the water was moving really, really fast," Shaylyn said. "We only packed one more outfit than what we had on."

That first night, the girls stayed with their family at Ekali Lake, an evacuee camp at kilometre 370 on the highway to Fort Providence. They decided to come to the hotel because everyone "really needed a shower," according to Shaylyn.

Kierstyn Hope, front, and Shaylyn Hope, back, play with their dog Hunter behind the Snowshoe hotel. (Travis Burke/CBC)

The girls spend their days playing with their husky Hunter, getting ice cream from Northmart and going to the local park. They also make time to visit their family on the second floor.

"I feel really comfortable here, because all our family's here," Shaylyn said. "And it feels like normal home," Kierstyn added.

'Everything is all gone'

To start their day, guests at the hotel cross the street to the Snowshoe's cafe. There, they can choose from a variety of breakfast foods on the menu for free, because their meals are being covered.

Carla Norwegian, along with her partner and three children, were among those eating at the cafe. The flood didn't spare anything in her home.

Carla Norwegian, centre, eats lunch with her three kids at the Snowshoe Cafe. Their family lost everything in the flood. (Travis Burke/CBC)

"The waterline just touched the bottom of our cupboards, so maybe like five feet in the house," she said. "Everything [is]all gone," she said.

For evacuees like the Norwegians, the hotel started a small pile of donations in the boardroom.The items come from all over the place, but mostly from the local northern store and families from Fort Providence that have extra to give.

A small donation pile has started in the hotel's basement for anyone needing fresh clothes after the flood. (Anna Desmarais/CBC)

'What happened here is a tragedy'

The hotel lobby, now the local gathering place for the community, is bustling. All day long, volunteers, guests and staff are coming in. They bring all kinds of stuff with them: clothing donations,fresh bannockand art supplies for the kids.

Melaine Norwegian, left, shares a laugh with other evacuees from Jean Marie River in the hotel lobby. (Travis Burke/CBC)

Most of the guests are splitting their time during the day between the hotel and going back to the community to survey the damage.

Hence the sign "please remove muddy boots" at the door.

Staff put up a sign asking people to take off their muddy shoes. Many of the guests are travelling between Providence and Jean Marie River to check on their homes. (Travis Burke/CBC)

Melaine Norwegianwas waiting for a ride back home when she shared her story.

She said everyone's just trying to "pull themselves together" in the immediate aftermath of the flood.

"I'm grateful that everybody from all directions are pulling together to help us," she said. "What happened here is a tragedy for everyone."

A photo posted by Paul Thunder-Stealer on May 8 shows the devastating effects of the flood on the community, where most homes were damaged or destroyed. (Paul Thunder-Stealer/Facebook)

When the hotel gave the Hope girls art supplies, they drew a thank you card for Mason and the Snowshoe staff on behalf of the whole Jean Marie River family.

Annette Mason holds up the card that the Hope sisters made for the staff of the Snowshoe Inn. (Anna Desmarais/CBC)

Just talking about it makes Mason emotional.

"It really touched my heart," she said. "These are the things that make everything worthwhile."

Corrections

  • This story was updated from a previous version that mistakenly said the evacuee camp was called Kelly Lake and was at kilometre 374 of the highway. It is, in fact, called Ekali Lake and is located at kilometre 370.
    May 19, 2021 1:15 PM CT

With files from Travis Burke