Slave Lake is a rural community located in Northern Alberta, on the south and southeast shore of Lesser Slave Lake. On May 14 and 15, 2011, it suffered a massive wildfire event that forced the evacuation of the entire population of the Town of Slave Lake (approximately 7,000 residents), the Sawridge First Nation and some residents of the Municipal District of Lesser Slave River No. 124. Residents of the affected area were under a mandatory evacuation order for almost two weeks. The fire affected about one-third of the town, destroying over 700 residences, some businesses, and the town hall (with included the municipal library, town administrative offices, and regional provincial government offices). Almost 60 properties were also destroyed in the Municipal District, and 32 other were damaged. Overall, the total cost of the disaster represents the second largest payout in Canadian insurance history.
Wildfires are a common occurrence within Canada but we do not completely understand how families and communities recover from such events. We conducted a research study in Slave Lake to find out: (1) the community dealt with the fire, (2) the ways in which families and children dealt with the fire, and (3) the local and regional services that assisted families, children and communities to recover from the wildfire.
We worked in cooperation with our community partner, an advisory committee and a research assistant from the community. Our results habe been widely disseminated and are listed below.
This project was funded by the Alberta Centre for Child, Family and Community Research (ACCFCR), the Government of Alberta, and the Insitute of Catastrophic Loss Reduction.
Research dissemination:
Technical reports:
Published material:
Academic presentations:
October 2-4, 2012. Kananaskis, Alberta. Wildland Fire Canada Conference 2012. Canadian Forest Service.
September 28, 2012. Edmonton, Alberta. Presentation of study results at the meeting Rural Linkages: Intercollaborative Practice for Safe & Healthy Commununities . Athabasca University.
August 21-27, 2012. Dortmund, Germany. Presentation of study results at the 2012 Annual Meeting: Transformations of the Urban. Urban Geography Commission, International Geographical Union.
April 17-19, 2012. Seattle, United States. Presentation of study results at the 3rd Human Dimensions of Wildland Fire Conference. International Association of Wildland Fire.
Media:
Public presentations:
Knowledge Translation Presentations
“Knowledge Translation is a dynamic and iterative process that includes the synthesis, dissemination, exchange and ethically-sound application of knowledge to improve the health of Canadians, provide more effective health services and products and strengthen the healthcare system. (http://www.researchnetrecherchenet.ca/rnr16/vwOpprtntyDtls.do?prog=1425&view
=seedlist&org=CIHR&type=AND&resultCount= 25&sort=program&all= 1&masterList
=true&language=E, retrieved April 4, 2012). The following list denotes the groups for whom a presentation or a written synthesis regarding the specific study was done.
1. Kulig, J., Townshend, I., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Edge, D., Reimer, W. & Lightfoot, N. Pujadas Botey, A., Ross, R., Mellott, J. McFarlane, B. & Coghlan, A. Families & Children: Responses to Wildfires—Links to Community Resilience
(1) The Human Impacts of Wildfires: What did we Learn from Slave Lake? Ministry of Education and Alberta Health, January 23, 2013
(2) Slave Lake Wildfires: Lessons for Emergency Management, Emergency/Disaster Services,Alberta Health Services (video link across the province), January 17, 2013
(3) Wildfire Research: Impacts on Children, Families and Communities, Slave Lake Recovery Group within the Ministry of Municipal Affairs, October 19, 2012
(4) Linking Wildfire Research to Creating Healthy Communities after Disasters, Presentation to 3 Ministries (Human Services, Environment & Sustainable Resource Development & Enterprise and Advanced Education) October 12, 2012
(5) Families & Children: Responses to Wildfires--Links to Community Resiliency, Two Public and Five Agency Presentations in Slave Lake, September 20 - 21, 2012 (with Anna Pujadas Botey)
(6) Families & Children: Responses to Wildfires--Links to Community Resiliency Tri-council Meeting, Slave Lake Alberta September 19, 2012 (with Anna Pujadas Botey)
(7) Interview Results, Alberta Centre for Child, Family and Community Research Child Data Lab, July 13, 2012 (with Anna Pujadas Botey)
(8) Preliminary Interview Results, 3 agency and 2 public presentations, Slave Lake AB, March20-22,2012 (with Anna Puadas Botey)
Invited Presentations
Kulig, J., on behalf of the Rural Wildfire Study Group[i]. (November 19, 2012) Slave Lake: Understanding the Impacts and Resiliency after Wildfires. Alberta Emergency Management Agency Summit, Edmonton, AB.
Kulig, J., on behalf of the Rural Wildfire Study Group. (October 20, 2012). How do Wildfires impact Families, Children & communities: Slave Lake as a Case Example. Senate, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB.
Kulig, J., (October 11, 2012). Preparing for the Next Disaster: Experiences from Slave Lake. Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs. Lethbridge, AB.
Contributed
Peer Reviewed
1. Edge, D., Kulig, J., Pujadas Botey, A., Townshend, I., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Reimer, W., Lightfoot, N., Ross, R., Mellott, J., McFarlane, B., Coghlan, A. (2012). Dealing with Wildfires: Understanding Community Resiliency in Slave Lake, Alberta. Rural and Remote Health Research: Creative Approaches. Canadian Rural Health Research Society 11th Annual Meeting, October 25 – 27, 2012, Levis, Quebec.
2. Kulig, J., Pujadas Botey, A., Townshend, I., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Edge, D., Reimer, W., Lightfoot, N., Ross, R., Mellott, J. McFarlane, B. & Coghlan, A., (2012). The Impacts of a Wildfire on Families and Children: Reporting on Slave Lake. Wildland Fire Canada Conference 2012, October 2 – 4, 2012, Kananaskis, Alberta.
3. Kulig, J., Pujadas Botey, A., Townshend, I. Awosoga, O., Shepard, B., Edge, D., Reimer, W., Lightfoot, N. (2012) Creating Healthy Communities After Disasters: Basing our Practice on Wildfire Research. Rural Linkages: Intercollaborative Practice for Safe and Healthy Communities. September, 28, 2012, Edmonton, AB.
4. Townshend, I., Kulig, J., Reimer, W., Edge, D., Lightfoot, N. Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Pujadas Botey, A., (2012). Children and Natural Disasters: Psychological Impacts and Barriers to Resilience. Urban Geography Commission, International Geographic Union. 2012 Annual Meeting, August 21 – 27, 2012, Dortmund, Germany.
5. Kulig, J., Pujadas Botey, A., Townshend, I., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Edge, D., Reimer, W., Lightfoot, N., Ross, R., Mellott, J. McFarlane, B. & Coghlan, A. (2012). What’s Next for Slave Lake, Alberta? Coming to Terms & Moving On from a Devastating Wildfire. The 3rd Human Dimensions of Wildland Fire Conference, April 16 – 19, 2012, Seattle, WA.
6. Townshend, I., Kulig, J., Reimer, W., Edge, D., Lightfoot, N., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Pujadas Botey, A., (2012). Social Factors in Resilience: Some Lessons Learned from Recent Wildfire Events. Western Division, Canadian Association of Geographers, 54th Annual Meeting, March 10 - 12, 2012, Kelowna, BC.
[i] Kulig, J., Pujadas Botey, A., Townshend, I., Shepard, B., Awosoga, O., Edge, D., Reimer, W., Lightfoot, N., Ross, R., Mellott, J. McFarlane, B. & Coghlan, A.
For more information about Slave Lake
Town of Slave Lake – Slave Lake Recovery
Municipal District of Lesser Slave Lake River No. 124
Lesser Slave Lake Indian Regional Council
Rebuilt Slave Lake – Helping Residents after the Wildfire
Government of Alberta - Wildfire Support
Lesser Slave Lake: Regional Wildfire Recovery Plan, 2011
AUPE - Loss and Hope (SlaveLakeFilm.com September 2011)
The Lakeside Leader Some notes of interest are:
Evacuation (May 2011)
The aftermath: consequences of the fire (newspapers of May 25 and June 1 2011, find them in archives)
Arson: likely cause of the fire (Nov 2011)
Grief and trauma by Dr. Simington (Dec 2011)
Review of 2011 (Jan 2012)