Volunteers prepare to hand out packed lunches to people lining up for fuel at Fort Providence, N.W.T., on the only road south from Yellowknife, Thursday, Aug. 17, 2023. Three weeks later, residents are returning to the city. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

Volunteers prepare to hand out packed lunches to people lining up for fuel at Fort Providence, N.W.T., on the only road south from Yellowknife, Thursday, Aug. 17, 2023. Three weeks later, residents are returning to the city. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

‘Welcome home’ sign out for Yellowknife residents after 3 weeks away

Evacuation order for the wildfire-threatened town has been lifted

Angela Canning rushed to the highway Wednesday morning to wave at the stream of vehicles heading back to Yellowknife as an evacuation order was lifted three weeks after a nearby wildfire forced the city’s 20,000 residents out of their homes.

“I’m very excited to have life come back to the city,” Canning said.

The order for the capital of the Northwest Territories, which also included the First Nation communities of Dettah and N’Dilo, was downgraded Wednesday to an evacuation alert. The fire was considered held, meaning it wasn’t expected to grow under current conditions.

Yellowknife Mayor Rebecca Alty posted on social media that she requested the order be lifted at 11 a.m., an hour earlier than planned.

“Safe travels home today,” Alty said.

A giant banner that says “welcome home” is up at the road entering Yellowknife to greet the thousands of vehicles that are expected to travel back to the city in the coming days.

Canning said she joined others by the sign to cheer on the first vehicles that drove into the community after the order was lifted. There was honking and waving as the drive-by celebrations marked a step toward normal life.

Canning knows the relief of returning home. She stayed in a camping trailer for 17 days in Fort Providence, southwest of Yellowknife. She was able to return over the weekend because her husband is an essential worker.

“I don’t know if I’ll ever want to go camping again,” she said.

Tens of thousands of people were forced to flee by road and air when the evacuation order came into effect Aug. 16 due to an encroaching wildfire.

Kelsey Worth packed up her children, two cats and dog and drove to Alberta — first to Calgary, then High River, before settling in the hamlet of Cayley.

She plans to pick up groceries and other items before beginning the long drive north Thursday.

Worth said she doesn’t have to be back at work until Monday, so she is waiting an extra day so as not to clog up the highway with more traffic.

“We’ve got a few extra days where we can take it a little slower,” she said.

Government officials have said they are making plans to keep the highway safe for those returning. They are also ensuring there are places for people to get fuel.

The first flight back to the territorial capital arrived Wednesday morning.

The Yellowknife Co-op said its shelves are stocked with groceries.

The city said its solid waste facility is to open Thursday and garbage pickup is also to start that day.

Residents have been advised they should prepare to be self-reliant for 72 hours upon their return.

Most people left Yellowknife by road, but thousands also took flights with destinations in British Columbia, Alberta and Manitoba.

The territory’s Emergency Management Organization has said more than 2,000 people have registered for re-entry flights.

For those who stayed in the territorial capital, it has been a welcome relief to see the faces of essential workers who began returning over the last few days.

“It’s been very tough days, long days — and not just for people on the ground, but evacuees who have been separated from their homes and families and friends,” said Kieron Testart, who works with Yellowknives Dene First Nation emergency operations.

Testart said people returning to Yellowknife will likely feel relieved, but there are others elsewhere in the territory who still can’t go back. Thousands of people living in Hay River and Fort Smith, who were ordered out days before Yellowknife, remain displaced from their homes.

“There are many northerners … who aren’t coming home,” Testart said.

“We can’t forget about them, too. It’s truly devastating.”

READ ALSO: Yellowknifers ready to return home as evacuation order set to lift

Northwest TerritoriesWildfires