Fire destroys rural bus driver's home, she still shows up for 5 a.m. school route - Action News
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Fire destroys rural bus driver's home, she still shows up for 5 a.m. school route

A rural Alberta bus driver's home caught fire last week, but despite the damage it caused that night, she still showed up for her 5 a.m. bus route so kids wouldn't miss school.

'The kids still need to get to school,' says Robyn Gilliland

Robyn Gilliland, a bus driver, showed up for her morning school route northwest of Medicine Hat despite fire destroying her home hours before. (Cody Gilliland and Robyn Gilliland)

A rural Alberta bus driver's home caught fire last week, but despite the damage it caused that night, she still showed up for her 5 a.m. bus route so kids wouldn't miss school.

Robyn Gilliland and her husband, Cody, liveon a ranch near CFB Suffield, northwest of Medicine Hat.

They watched fire destroy their mobile homeon Nov. 22.

"Both my husband and I were, we were actually watching a movie, and my husband had kind of smelled something, you know, it smelt hot and had a melted burning smell," shetoldtheCalgary Eyeopeneron Wednesday.

"We grabbed our little miniature two dachshunds and we got out. That was it. So whatever we had in our arms and on our backs, that's what we got out with."

Gilliland says that by the time they reached the door,their homewas completely full of smoke.

"My husbandsaid later that he could feel the crackling under the floor. So that's where the fire was, was underneath the trailer."

The two, both in their pyjamas, jumped in their truck and waited for the fire department to come.

"They did a remarkable job of trying to save what they could. We're trying to see if we can salvage maybe a few clothes, and that looks to be about it," she said.

"Those trailers don't hold up well to any kind of fire."

Robyn Gilliland, left, and her husband, Cody, lost all of the contents of their mobile home when it caught fire on Nov 22. (Rachel Neufeld )

Luckily, the couple's neighbour is the local fire chiefand he and his wife offered the two a place to stay for awhile.

"Within the rural community, we help each other throughout the whole year. I mean, whether it's calving, branding,farmingwhatever it takes just to kind of look after each other and watch out," she said.

"So they immediately opened their home to us, as did the rest of the community."

  • Listen to the full interview from the Calgary Eyeopenerbelow.

Despite having a hard night,Gillilandstill woke up hours later to make her 5 a.m. bus route.

"The kids still need to get to schoo,l and plus, that's a whole other family for me," she said.

"I still owe them, you know, the privilege of gettingto school safely, and it was kind of a bit of a distraction for me that I could continue to do that for them."

Now, school bus drivers in the Medicine Hat area are pitching in to help and put togethera GoFundMe to support the couple.

"Our rural families and communities that are coming together for us is unbelievable," Gilliland said.


With files from theCalgary Eyeopener.