Cottage owners and disaster prevention experts in Manitoba are urging governments to develop comprehensive wildfire management plans after a pair of devastating wildfires.
Close to 1,000 people were forced from their homes last week as a wildfire near the Rural Municipality of Lac du Bonnet, spurred by dry, hot and windy conditions, burned nearby.
The quick-moving fire, which is currently being held, destroyed 28 homes and cottages and left two people dead.
“The whole emergency plan for every municipality should be under a microscope review right now,” said Brad Wood, a Winnipeg firefighter whose cottage was destroyed.
Wood was one of several residents allowed to return Wednesday to assess the damage. His cottage was among 18 homes destroyed on Wendigo Road. Rubbles of black, charred materials and singed trees overtook what used to be lush, green vegetation.
“I’ve never seen fire devastation at that level,” Wood said.
When Lianne Ross-Martin returned to her Wendigo Road cottage, it looked like a “wasteland.”
“Wendigo Road is in my soul. I have been out there my entire life,” said Ross-Martin, who primarily lives in Winnipeg. “I don’t know what I am without a Wendigo Road.”
Wood was at the cottage when word of the fires began to spread. A neighbour saw his truck and notified him of the impending fire. In less than 20 minutes, clear blue skies were filled with smoke, he recalled.
Neither he nor Ross-Martin received notifications about the wildfires.
This handout photo from Lianne Ross-Martin shows what was left of her cottage in the Rural Municipality of Lac du Bonnet, Man. on Wednesday May 21, 2025, after a wildfire destroyed homes on Windego Road, including Ross-Martin’s. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Lianne Ross-Martin **MANDATORY CREDIT**This handout photo from Lianne Ross-Martin shows what was left of her cottage in the Rural Municipality of Lac du Bonnet, Man. on Wednesday May 21, 2025, after a wildfire destroyed homes on Wendigo Road, including Ross-Martin’s.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Lianne Ross-Martin
Wood is calling on all levels of government to work with local cottage owners to create or update emergency plans to mitigate wildfire danger.
“We don’t really have any kind of public notification to teach or to give people any form of information or access to information,” he said.
Since the evacuation, local officials have said they have been working to get timely information out to residents through various channels, mainly social media.
Gordon Campbell, president of the Lester Beach Association in the Rural Municipality of Alexander, said he and other members went to officials a few years ago to come up with a wildfire management plan as dry conditions made nearby forests vulnerable to fires.
The group was looking for information on evacuation routes if there were wildfires, how people would be alerted, safety protocols and plans to maintain forested areas.
Progress has been slow, with some meetings taking place last year and this past spring, he said.
“We’ve continued to push the rural municipality to develop this plan,” said Campbell.
Parts of the municipality were evacuated last week as a colossal wildfire near Nopiming Provincial Park burned. Some people were allowed home this week — provided residents signed up for the municipality’s alert system and were ready to leave within two hours if conditions changed.
Campbell said he has seen the benefits of an alert system, but it can only work if everyone uses it. Rural areas are often dead zones for cellphone connectivity, making it challenging for critical alerts to come through.
He said many municipalities are being reactive instead of proactive.
The Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction has been seeing movement from governments in British Columbia and Alberta. But the Toronto-based research centre said the uptick in being fire smart drops the farther east you go.
“Until they have a loss in the community, it’s not something they think about,” said managing director Glenn McGillivray.
Climate research shows wildfires have become more prevalent in places where people live in the past 15 years, but loss of life among residents is rare, said McGillivray.
He said communities should be built up in a way that makes them wildfire resilient, such as using fire-retardant materials when building homes.
“We rely too much on voluntary actions,” he said. “We can no longer just rely on voluntary action — we have to embed this into the law.”