Flood evacuees from Hay River and Kt'odeeche welcomed in Yellowknife - Action News
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Flood evacuees from Hay River and Kt'odeeche welcomed in Yellowknife

Flood evacuees from Hay River and Kt'odeeche First Nation are trickling into the Yellowknife multiplex, where they can register as evacuees and find places to shelter with their families and pets while they wait for a safe return to their communities.

'Happy we're here now': Evacuees bring their kids and pets to safety in wake of flooding

Andy Cardinal drove to Yellowknife last night after a harrowing escape from rising waters on the reserve. His brother helped a lineup of vehicles blocked by chunks of ice large enough to strand a loader. (Marc Winkler/CBC)

Flood evacuee Andy Cardinal just drove all night to get to the Yellowknife Multiplex and says it's been an "emotional roller coaster" thinking of the residents of Hay River and Kt'odeeche First Nation who were ordered to leave the flood zone last night.

He's one of 3,800 people who were ordered out of the community just before midnight as water from the Hay River, which carries water from Alberta into Great Slave Lake, began flooding the entire community.

At the multiplex, evacuees are registering themselves and Yellowknifersare ready to pitch in to help those that are displaced.

Cardinal,who lives on the Kt'odeeche reservefive kilometres from the Kt'odeeche bridge,said that everything happened quickly, with floodwaters suddently spilling over the road as he was leaving.

Carol Dixon on fleeing Hay River, N.W.T.

2 years ago
Duration 1:44
Carol Dixon and her husband escaped the Hay River flood. They raced through the rushing water to find safety in Yellowknife.She spoke with the CBC outside Yellowknife's multiplex.

"The water was just coming up. People were just driving through as fast as they could, so they wouldn't stop," he said.

Cardinal said community members have been helping each other out, like elders who needed assistance using the cardlockgas pumps to get out of town.

Conditions deteriorated rapidly.

"The water came up so fast. Unbelievable, like a jump [of] four feet in seconds, like four feet," he said.

"Then we said, we're out of here. We jumped, cut off all the power, jumped in the truck, and we were gone."

When Cardinal reached the bridge, the alarm to leave the reserve was already blaring.

"The scary part about it was that it came up so fast on the ice bridge crossing that all got pushed up with ice."

Evacuees register at the Yellowknife Multiplex a day after all of Hay River and Ktodeeche First Nation were ordered to leave the flood zone. (Hannah Paulson/CBC)

People in the village were stuck, and so Cardinal's brother Amos brought in a loader to push the ice aside.

There were cars lined up when his brother arrived and the ice chunks were so large they could push a loader to the side.

"He started fighting with the ice to get it to move it back," Cardinal said. "He was having trouble moving the ice, but he just managed to get inside long enough for the vehicles to start going through. So it was really nerve-wracking."

Cardinal lost his phone in the escape.

"You're thinking of so much. You're thinking of a family, you're thinking of phoning people, see if they got out, see if they need help. It's a lot of looking after not only yourself, but family."

After a long night's drive, Cardinal said he's registered himself as an evacuee at the multiplex, where volunteers are making sure people are fed.

On Thursday morning, Javaroma'sFadil Memedibrought food for evacuees.

Javaroma owner Fadil Memedi makes a delivery to the multiplex. (Marc Winkler/CBC)

'How much we lost'

Out of all the years Carol Dixon has lived in Hay River, she said she's never seen the flood this bad. Not even the 1963 flood compares.

"It's the Elders and the people back home that I think about," she said, having reached the safety of Yellowknife.

"It's very hard to see all my hometown people have to rush out of town."

Carol Dixon, an evacuee from the Hay River flood, stands outside the Yellowknife Multiplex where people who fled their community can register as evacuees. (Hannah Paulson/CBC)

When the flood waters rose late Wednesday night, Dixon made the call to get off the reserve. Water was gushing up the highway and pushing trees off the river banks.

"It was so overwhelming to see something like that it breaks my heart," said Dixon.

Most of the reserve was underwater, she said.

"We're thinking of what it will be like when we go home, and how much we lost."

Bringing the elderly to safety

Jennifer Kraus said she got on the road last night to find a comfortable place for her elderly parents to sleep. (Marc Winkler/CBC)

Vale Island resident Jennifer Kraus has been up all night her parents are elderly and she wanted to make sure they had a comfortable place to sleep.

The situation is emotional.

"I'm exhausted. I need sleep. I'm trying very hard to remain strong. But it is what it is."

Kraus had been staying in the hotel until Wednesday. People started leaving and she wanted to be on the safe side.

Leaving the community was "one big, mad mess."

"People were in a panic," she said.

They couldn't find a place in Enterprise or Fort Providence. Their next stop was hours away in Yellowknife.

'Happy we're here now'

Deena Corrigal, who lives in Hay River's New Town area, left the community around4 a.m. as her boyfriend saw the water was rising, and fast.

"We didn't want to ... just wait around to see what would happen."

Now both of them are in Yellowknife with her son Kenneth and their pet.

It was really scary. I'm just happy we're here now. We're safe, and we brought our cat," said Deena Corrigal, who fled Hay River last night with her son. (Marc Winkler/CBC)

Her son has his blanket and his stuffed kitties.

He asks, "Mommy, did the water come [to] this road?"

She assures him the water isn't coming to Yellowknife.

They found a room at Quality Inn, which allows pets.

"It was really scary. I'm just happy we're here now. We're safe," Corrigal said.

"It was like a scene from a horror movie. I was terrified and trying to stay calm."

Many people slept in their vehicles last night but it wasn't exactly an option for her family of three.

"I'm nervous and worried about our house and if it's okay if our basement is flooded. But it's fine. All this stuff can be replaced."

With files from Marc Winkler and Hannah Paulson