The long trip home: evacuees return to Kashechewan after 2014 flood - Action News
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The long trip home: evacuees return to Kashechewan after 2014 flood

Four hundred evacuees from Kashechewan First Nation to prepare to return home, two years after flooding forced them to set up temporary homes in Kapuskasing.

Future is aways a roll of the dice for residents of flood-prone First Nation

A few thousand people live in Kashechewan, a remote first nation on Ontario's James Bay Coast. (Erik White/CBC )

It's so long, KashKap.

Four hundred evacuees from Kashechewan First Nation to prepare to return home, two years after flooding forced them to set up temporary homes and lives in Kapuskasing.

The evacuees have been staying in apartments, paid for by the government, while new homes were built to replace the mouldy houses they used to live in.

About eight families have moved back into new modular homes built over the summer.

This repatriation is expected to continue over the winter and into the spring with all 104 new homes expected to be lived in by August.

Kapuskasing fire chief Gerry Desmeules said the plan is to fly a handful of families back to Kashechewan every few weeks, with the goal of having everyone home by the end of the summer.

"When they left Kashechewan two and a half years ago now, they basically left with a small duffle bag with some clothes," Desmeules said, "they've basically rebuilt their memories and all their personal property and stuff while they were here in Kapuskasing."
In the spring of 2014, 36 houses in Kashechewan were condemned due to mold problems, with most of their owners ending up in Kapuskasing, as there is no where else to stay in a community that was already facing a housing shortage. (Erik White/CBC)

Although the homes being built in Kashechewan are modular, and could be moved if severe floods return, some residents aren't so sure they'll be gone for long.

"Some people are saying as they get on the plane, well, we're going to see you again in the spring, because obviously the problems they have with flooding up the coast," Desmeules said, "so, it's always a rollof the dice for them."