Whitehorse prepares for the worst, with simulated emergency - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:57 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Whitehorse prepares for the worst, with simulated emergency

People were going through the motions of dealing with a wildfire in Whitehorse on Wednesday. Members of the Canadian Forces and local emergency services were staging an exercise as part of Operation Nanook-Tatigiit.

'We're learning a lot from it. We're learning how to work together really effectively'

Dozens of cots were set up at the Canada Games Centre in Whitehorse on Wednesday, though none were actually used. The makeshift emergency reception centre was part of an emergency training exercise. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

People in Whitehorse wereseeing some military activityaround the city on Wednesday but it was only a drill.Canadian Forces and local emergency workerswereconducting exercises to helpprepare for the worst.

It's part of this year's Operation Nanook-Tatigiit. TheArctic military exercises takes place regularly in a different locations across the North.

"It's rare that we have an opportunity to all work together in a simulation like this. A lot of work has gone into it," said John Coyne, with Yukon's Department of Health and Social Services.

Coyne was at the Canada Games Centre in Whitehorse, where dozens of cots were set up in a simulated emergency centre.

The annual training exercise was focused more on wildfires this year.The drill sawemergency crews and volunteers pretend there was a major wildfire south of the city thatforcedthe evacuation of the rural subdivisions of Cowley Creek and Mary Lake.

'We're learning how to work together really effectively,' said John Coyne of Yukon's Department of Health and Social Services. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

"We're learning a lot from it. We're learning how to work together really effectively," Coyne said.

More than 150 military personnel were in Whitehorse for the exercise, along with dozens of local emergency workers. The Department of Health and Social Services alone had 30 to 40 people involved, Coyne said.

Deanna White was the childcare supervisor at the emergency reception centre. She says even though there were no actual evacueesthere, the simulation was effective and useful.

"They tell you that it's now [accelerated]to the next community, and you start to panic how am I going to care for another 20 children, and stuff like that. So it is very realistic when you're in here," she said.

White says a big part of her job is creating a "calm, chill environment" forchildren who may be scared and confused in an actual emergency.

Deanna White, childcare supervisor at the emergency reception centre, says the simulation was effective and useful. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

"It's loud and it's scary and it's a very weird environment. That's why we try to set up sort of like the cozy corner we've got," she said.

"We have people on our team that do the trauma-informed care, because again, you may or may not have just lost everything that you have, and you're three years old how are you going to explain that?"

Practicing evacuation order

Residents of Cowley Creek and Mary Lake were not actually forced to leave their homes as part of the simulation, andwere told ahead of time that it was just a drill.

Mary Lake resident Sandy Johnston said he didn't get a lot of information beforehand, but he didn't seem to mind. He said he was just glad to see it happening.

Mary Lake resident Sandy Johnston speaks to a member of the Canadian Forces, during the simulated evacuation of his neighbourhood. Residents were not actually forced to leave their homes. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

"I think it's long overdue. We really need agood evacuation plan for the city," he said.

"Every day that it's above 25 Cand sunnywith the wind blowing, I'm always looking to the south for smoke. So it's a constant. It's constantly on our minds."

Chris Green, deputy fire chief with the Whitehorse Fire Department says the military presence has helped expand firefighters'wildfire preparation and helped them accomplish more work.

"We're really testing our evacuation plan for the city," he said.

On Tuesday,firefighters and military personnel went door-to-door in the Cowley Creek and Mary Lake subdivisions, assessing properties for wildfire risk.

Military personnel and firefighters speak with a resident of Whitehorse on Tuesday. Exercises have focused on preparing for a wildfire, which includes mapping neighbourhoods for potential risks and resources such as creeks and small lakes. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

Green says firefighters also made note of creeks or lakes which could be used to pump water.

"This structural triage is, basically, identifying if a property or a group of properties can be saved in the event of a wildfire," he said. "It also helps identify those available resources," he said.

Green said that firefighters are able to provide recommendations, but don't have legal power to make residents cut down trees or change things on their properties.

"All we can do is educate," he said.

With files from Philippe Morin