Fire and ice: Evacuation orders lifted as cooler weather hits Alberta
Posted June 7, 2019 11:59 am.
Last Updated June 7, 2019 12:00 pm.
SLAVE LAKE – Several evacuation alerts have been lifted as cooler weather has made it easier for crews to battle forest fires in northern Alberta.
Alerts for the town of Slave Lake and several other communities in the area were lifted this morning.
Wildfire Alert Ended Jun07 949AM Slave Lake https://t.co/L8ht6OCtPQ #ABfire #ABemerg
— Alberta Emergency Alert (@AB_EmergAlert) June 7, 2019
Officials say rain in the last 48 hours has helped ease the hazard on the south end of the McMillan fire, which is burning about 32 kilometres northeast of Slave Lake.
As the weather helps firefighters in the north, it’s causing bad driving conditions in the south.
Environment Canada meteorologist Kyle Fougere says there’s a report of about 25 centimetres of snow northwest of Cochrane.
Yikes! SNOW Near Cochrane / Ghost Lake Alberta . Much needed moisture on its way to Saskatchewan #ABstorm #skstorm Photo taken by Linda Benner (June 7 2019) pic.twitter.com/72TvXktoyz
— Adaptive Agriculture (@SaskProAg) June 7, 2019
The snowfall in southwestern Alberta turns to rain north of Red Deer, and that tapers off closer to High Level, where the Chuckegg Creek fire is still burning out of control.
Mandatory evacuations remain in place for some areas of Mackenzie County, the Paddle Prairie Metis Settlement, parts of the Municipal District of Opportunity and the Peerless Trout First Nation.