Eabametoong First Nation evacuating most vulnerable as it reaches 5 days without running water

Evacuees from Eabamatoong First Nation in northwestern Ontario arrive in Thunder Bay. Community leaders decided to evacuate the most vulnerable after a fire at the water treatment plant left the First Nation without running water. (Marc Doucette/CBC)Eabametoong First Nation in northwestern Ontario is evacuating hundreds of vulnerable community members and has declared a state of emergency on its fifth day without access to running water.The remote Ojibway First Nation of about 1,600 people is approximately 360 kilometres north of Thunder Bay, Ont. It has been in a state of emergency since a fire broke out at the Eabametoong First Nation Water Treatment Plant last week.The blaze was determined to be arson and more than one suspect has been apprehended, Eabametoong Chief Solomon Atlookan said, declining to provide further details. The fire caused extensive damage to the treatment plant. Atlookan said there's no access to water for bathing, drinking and using the restroom. The smell of s

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Eabametoong First Nation evacuating most vulnerable as it reaches 5 days without running water
A younger woman in a safety vest helps and older woman off a plane.
Evacuees from Eabamatoong First Nation in northwestern Ontario arrive in Thunder Bay. Community leaders decided to evacuate the most vulnerable after a fire at the water treatment plant left the First Nation without running water. (Marc Doucette/CBC)

Eabametoong First Nation in northwestern Ontario is evacuating hundreds of vulnerable community members and has declared a state of emergency on its fifth day without access to running water.

The remote Ojibway First Nation of about 1,600 people is approximately 360 kilometres north of Thunder Bay, Ont. It has been in a state of emergency since a fire broke out at the Eabametoong First Nation Water Treatment Plant last week.

The blaze was determined to be arson and more than one suspect has been apprehended, Eabametoong Chief Solomon Atlookan said, declining to provide further details. 

The fire caused extensive damage to the treatment plant. Atlookan said there's no access to water for bathing, drinking and using the restroom. The smell of sewage has been detected in some homes already. 

"The wastewater is not going anywhere, except into our system," Atlookan said. "Some of the houses are starting to smell. That's going to become a bigger problem as we go on." 

Without safe drinking water, Atlookan announced an evacuation to Thunder Bay for vulnerable groups, such as elders and people who are chronically ill. The first flights left Eabametoong First Nation on Sunday morning and will continue. 

A flight arrived in Thunder Bay on Monday evening shortly after 6 p.m. ET with roughly 30 children, young people, elders and their caregivers. 

A man speaks at a microphone during a press conference.
Eabametoong First Nation Chief Solomon Atlookan, shown at a news conference at Queen's Park in Toronto in this file photo, says that due to the damage water-treatment plant, 'The wastewater is not going anywhere, except into our system.' (Heather Waldron/CBC)

"We had a total of 400 people that needed to leave right away," said the chief. "We're working on it now. The people that we identified needed to be out there, so [it will] make things a little bit lighter and easier to distribute and work here, to look after the people that are going to remain behind here."

Between 1,000 and 1,200 people are staying in the community. Though fewer than 300 are still waiting to get out, Atlookan said getting access to aircraft for everyone to leave has been a challenge.

Community 'deflated' after losing water access

Eabametoong First Nation's inability to access clean water is a situation familiar to First Nations.

Numerous reserves have been under water advisories because they have no access to safe drinking water.

Eabametoong First Nation has been on a long-term boil-water advisory since August 2002. Neskantaga First Nation, approximately 450 kilometres north of Thunder Bay, has been under a boil-water advisory for 28 years, the longest of any other First Nation in Canada. 

Jason Morningstar, founder and chief executive officer of Mspections Inc., which specializes in First Nation housing in Kingston, Ont., arrived in Eabametoong First Nation on Tuesday to do electrical upgrades to houses.

Now Morningstar, along with his team of six, including his 16-year-old son, Theron, shifted gears to get a water supply for community members. He said Eabametoong First Nation has been through difficult times for many years.

"They've reached out for help a number of times and have gotten very little," said Morningstar. "So what I see is a community that is already deflated. They don't set the bar high when these incidents happen. They're very self-sufficient. We've seen an opportunity to help with a very important role, which is water distributions to the houses."

A woman walks off a plane holding her baby.
Evacuees from Eabamatoong First Nation arrived in Thunder Bay on Monday evening. Approximately 100 of the 400 identified by the community as needing evacuation have arrived in Thunder Bay. (Marc Doucette/CBC)

Morningstar said he gives this community credit for helping each other. While Morningstar has seen leadership become exhausted, he said the community has gotten through the toughest part together as a team.

"Water should not be a luxury. It should be a necessity. But up here, unfortunately it is a luxury, and when that luxury is gone, you get deflated," Morningstar said. "This community gets deflated, and when we were able to provide them with that continuous source of lake water just for something as simple as flushing a toilet, they were extremely thankful."

Atlookan said a final report will be released Friday to see if the water treatment plant will be safe to resume. If it's still deemed unsafe, he expects the evacuation will continue.

"After all this happening with the contamination going into this trying to avoid the contamination going into our water system, that is one of the biggest issues," said Atlookan. "There's going to be a little uneasy feeling to even drink water from the tap. They're doing whatever they can to make sure absolutely no contamination goes into the system before they even open it to make water into the community" for distribution.

CBC spoke with Eabametoong First Nation community members who said they're scared at the the idea of the report coming back with negative results and then forcing everyone to evacuate their homes.

"We are going to get tired, I'm sure. It's tiring already," said Atlookan. "So we're hoping we're going to see the results we want to hear."

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