PEG Magazine - Winter 2016

GOOD WORKS

A Firefighter’s View

Auxiliary firefighter Keith Diakiw, P.Geo., reflects on his experience battling the Fort McMurray wildfire

On May 3, the wildfire was wreaking havoc in Fort McMurray. Keith Diakiw, P.Geo., however, was taking a firefighter refresher course at Canadian Natural Resources’ Horizon firehall about 80 kilometres north of the city. An auxiliary firefighter with the company, he works as an equipment operator at the Horizon oil sands site. “By lunch, another fire auxiliary member got a call that his home was gone,” he recalls. “Fort Mac was basically burning.” Canadian Natural’s firefighter contingent includes six full- time crew members and about 60 auxiliaries like Mr. Diakiw. That morning, they could only watch in shock as events unfolded in Fort McMurray. But when a mutual aid call came in from the Regional Munici- pality of Wood Buffalo seeking assistance from oil sands operations in the region, members of Canadian Natural’s emergency services were among the firefighters racing towards the flames to help protect the city. It brought back memories of 2011, when Mr. Diakiw battled forest fires that threatened industry sites north of Fort McMurray. For the second time in five years, Mr. Diakiw found himself in an evacuation zone, fighting fires.

SHADOWS, SMOKE, LIGHT, AND FLAMES More than 2,000 firefighters from Alberta, across Canada, and around the world worked around the clock, battling fires like this one in Fort McMurray. -photo courtesy Keith Diakiw, P.Geo.

THE CALM BEFORE THE FIRESTORM

A day earlier, Mr. Diakiw was driving north into Fort McMurray when he noticed a giant plume of smoke. He was sitting at the traffic lights on Highway 63 by the Sawridge Hotel when two fire trucks flew by going south. About eight police cars were at the intersection with their lights on. “I thought, wow, this looks serious,” he says. “The fire seemed far away, yet close. It was kind of an eerie feeling.” Any concerns he had about the fire were laid to rest Tuesday morning. Up at 4:30 a.m., he headed to his bus stop as the sun was rising. The sky was blue. “It was clear as a bell. No smell of smoke,” he says. Things, of course, would turn out differently. “It was the calm before the storm.” Later that afternoon, the setting was considerably less serene. As fire crews headed south into town, thousands of residents were fleeing north. They sought shelter at numerous oil sands camps in the region, including Horizon. Mr. Diakiw himself was an evacuee. He has a home in Fort McMurray, so he didn’t have anything with him, not even his wallet. “It became quite chaotic for everybody.” Mr. Diakiw was on night shift that week, so his firefighting crew first headed into Fort McMurray the evening of May 4. The

fire had grown to 10,000 hectares (on its way to nearly 590,000 hectares by mid-June) and an estimated 1,600 buildings had already burned down. The city remained a battleground, surrounded and in some cases engulfed by fire. “Driving in, you could see the charred forest on either side of the road where the firestorm went through along Highway 63,” says Mr. Diakiw. “There was a lot of smoke and helicopters flying over- head. Police at all the intersections monitoring traffic.” Over the next week, he worked four shifts, fighting blazes from 6:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. He was one of 2,200 firefighters from Alberta, across Canada, and around the world who worked tirelessly to help save the vast majority of the community’s infrastructure. “My hat is off to those men and women firefighters who came from so far away. There were hundreds of people at the staging areas. They were there a week or two straight, fighting the fires,” he says. His own crew was sent on calls across the city. While putting out hot spots in Wood Buffalo, he got his first up-close look at the destruction. Four square blocks of houses were burned to their foundations, yet streetlights were still on, casting halos in the smoke.

48 | PEG WINTER 2016

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