FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. – When a baby’s ready to be born, not even a raging wildfire or hurried evacuation can get in the way.
That’s what staff at the Noralta Lodge at Fort McMurray Village discovered Tuesday when a woman who had been brought to the housing camp went into labour.
Blaire McCalla, marketing manager for the company that provides housing for oilfield workers, said as fire forced the evacuation of the city on Tuesday, several medical personnel from the local hospital were brought to the lodge, 26 kilometres north of Fort McMurray.
She said a woman who was in labour was brought to the lodge and gave birth with the help of the medical staff, “so that’s kind of nice.”
The woman was later transferred to an airstrip for evacuation.
McCalla was unsure whether the camp already had a medical centre or if the hospital workers set up a makeshift clinic, but either way, the facility served the purpose.
“And stress can often induce labour, so it’s not all that surprising, I guess.”
Fort McMurray Mayor Melissa Blake took to social media to mark the blessed event.
“Time for good news,” she tweeted. “I hear a baby (maybe 2) was born tonight and delivered by @NoraltaLodge! Full service evacuation rocks! #bewellbabies”
Oilsands work camps fill with fire evacuees
Oilsands work camps were being pressed into service Tuesday to house evacuees as a raging wildfire emptied the city of Fort McMurray.
“We’ve made our work camp available to staff and their families who have been evacuated and need a place to stay,” said Cameron Yost of Shell Canada.
“We are looking at getting non-essential people out by aircraft,” said Yost, who added Shell’s camp could accommodate hundreds of evacuees.
Most oilsands projects are well north of the community, while the worst of the flames were on the city’s south side.
Shell’s camp is about 95 kilometres away and remained operating late Tuesday. Still, precautions were being taken.
Officials were also evacuating non-essential staff at Suncor’s base plant, at 30 kilometres away one of the closest facilities to the city, said spokesman Paul Newmarch. Evacuees were moving in to the plant’s work camps.
“We’re providing transportation and accommodation to the region to support the evacuation,” he said. “We’re making whatever we have available to support the evacuation.”
Newmarch said essential workers remained at the plant and production, as of late Tuesday afternoon, was continuing.
Will Gibson, a spokesman for Syncrude, which has a plant about 35 kilometres north of town, was himself one of the evacuees heading north away from the flames.
“People are actually being evacuated toward the plants,” he said. “We’re being instructed to go to work camps in the region and report in there. We’re assuming it will be more than a night.”
Gibson said he had to flee his neighbourhood via a grass embankment because the fire had already cut off the road at both ends.
“I left my neighbourhood and there was houses on fire,” he said. “I don’t know if and when I’ll be going back.”
Large work camps associated with oilsands projects can accommodate thousands to house workers who come from as far away as Newfoundland and Labrador.
A 2015 municipal census counted 43,000 people in its “shadow” population, a term used for temporary residents who often live in such camps.