First Nations fire deaths stir debate - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:55 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

First Nations fire deaths stir debate

More than 30 people have died in fires on Manitoba First Nations since 2005 and there are differing opinions on how to combat the problem.
A house on God's Lake Narrows First Nation was reduced to rubble after a fire Monday. Three people, including two children, were killed. (CBC)

More than 30 people have died in fires on Manitoba First Nations since 2005 and thereare differing opinions on how to combat the problem.

A one-year-old boy,three-year-old girl and theirgrandfather diedon Monday when their home went up in flames on God's Lake Narrows First Nation.

Peter Watt, chief of the reserve, hassaid the victims didn't have a chance because the community has no fire truck.

'All of these fires, in my opinion, are foreseeable and therefore they are preventable. We're just not learning from them.' Sean Tracey, National Fire Protection Association

But Sean Tracey, Canadian regional manager of the National Fire Protection Association, said on Wednesday the solution is notfire trucks, but proper education and fire prevention.

"All of these fires, in my opinion, are foreseeable and therefore they are preventable. We're just not learning from them," he said.

"We could save these lives if we have a good public education program."

First Nations leadership needs to come up with prevention programs, he added.

"I just don't think that there's recognition that this is a crisis that's being faced in First Nations communities by the Assembly of First Nations and others," Tracey said.

However, Ron Evans, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs disagrees, calling that too simple a solution for a complicated problem.

"It's about more than that.[Tracey's suggestion] fails to see the substandard housing, the overcrowded that the leadership has to deal with in the communities," he said.

And FirstNations communities need resources, such as working fire trucks, in order to have a chance at saving lives, Evans said.

Investigators from the provincial fire commissioner's office are trying todetermine the cause of the God's Lake Narrows fire.