Current situation
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The evacuation order for the town of Edson will be lifted at 6 p.m. today. Information on re-entry is available at edson.ca. The town will remain on a four-hour evacuation alert. Residents should be ready to leave in a short time frame if conditions worsen.
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The evacuation order for some areas of Yellowhead County has been lifted and a partial re-entry began on June 14 at 6 p.m. The evacuation order for the remaining areas of Yellowhead County will end at 6 p.m. today. Information for re-entry is available at yhcounty.ca.
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The evacuation order for the remaining area of Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation was lifted as of June 14. Information for re-entry is available at sturgeonlake.ca.
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An evacuation order remains in effect for the hamlet of Fort Chipewyan, Mikisew Cree First Nation (Allison Bay, Dog Head and Devils Gate), Fort Chipewyan Metis Nation and Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. Parts of Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation remain under evacuation order.
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An evacuation alert remains in effect as of 7:55 a.m. June 15 for Brazeau County, west of Range Road 95 to the entire Brazeau County border from north to south, including Lodgepole and Cynthia.
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An evacuation alert remains in effect for Woodlands County as of 6:04 p.m. June 14: north of Township Road 561, west of Range Road 120 south of Groat Creek Road, Township Road 584 west of the McLeod River to Range Road 144 east of the McLeod River to Range Road 123 at Whitecourt Mountain.
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View the full list of evacuation orders.
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Visit 511.alberta.ca for up-to-date information on road closures and travel advisories.
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Support continues to be available to Albertans 24-7. Visit alberta.ca/emergency or call 310-4455.
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Current wildfire information is available on the Alberta Wildfire Status Dashboard.
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Current year wildfires by suspected cause:
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Human: 379 (Human-caused wildfires cover several different categories – everything from recreational fires to agricultural incidents to wildfires caused by people on residential land. Human-caused wildfires account for more than half of all wildfires annually.)
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Lightning: 138
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Under investigation: 125
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Albertans are asked to do their part to prevent new wildfires by respecting fire bans or restrictions in their areas. Visit albertafirebans.ca for details.
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Special air quality statements remain in effect across parts of the province. Visit airquality.alberta.ca to find out the level of health risk associated with your local air quality.
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Number of evacuation orders: 5
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Alberta Emergency Alerts: 2 orders and 3 alerts
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Number of evacuees: 13,607
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Alberta currently has approximately 2,800 personnel working on wildfires. This includes support from partner agencies across Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, as well as the Canadian Armed Forces.
Support for evacuees
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Those evacuated due to wildfires should register at local reception centres or at emergencyregistration.alberta.ca.
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Since the announcement of one-time emergency financial assistance for evacuees, more than 24,300 applications have been processed.
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More than $31.7 million in e-transfers has been sent to evacuees.
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More than $10.6 million in debit cards has been distributed.
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Residents who have been evacuated from Edson and Yellowhead County can apply for emergency evacuation assistance.
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Alberta Supports staff will provide debit cards to evacuees at the Edmonton Expo Centre:
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Until June 16, from 8:15 a.m. to 8 p.m.
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June 17 to 18, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
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Donations
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Albertans who wish to help can make cash donations through the Canadian Red Cross or within their regions to a recognized charitable organization of their choice.
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The Canadian Red Cross has launched an Immediate Support to Not-for-Profit Organizations program to deliver urgent and ongoing support for people affected by wildfires across Alberta.
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Eligible community organizations providing immediate relief assistance may apply for $5,000 in one-time funding. View full program eligibility criteria.
For more information on the emergency and supports for evacuees, go to alberta.ca/emergency.