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Fort McMurray exodus: Convoy of evacuees get 1st glimpse of fire-ravaged city

Fire continues to burn out of control, had covered about 101,000 hectares by Friday morning

By Rick McConnell, CBC News, Posted: May 05, 2016 11:40 PM MT, Last Updated: May 06, 2016 2:24 PM MT, http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...vaged-city-1.3569517

The first convoy of fire evacuees began to roll just after dawn Friday.

The first convoy of fire evacuees began to roll just after dawn Friday. (CBC)

Not long after dawn, the first convoy began to roll: a long, slow parade of cars and trucks stretched along Highway 63, moving south toward Fort McMurray.

For hundreds of evacuees — thousands by day's end — it will be a grim, sad and surreal journey, as they drive through the burned city they fled just 72 hours ago. 

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 'You don't really care about your house so much anymore'

After three days stranded in oilsands work camps north of the city, thousands of families are expected to be escorted south through their fire-ravaged community.

They will be the first residents to see the devastation left by a terrifying wildfire that tore into town Tuesday, raining embers and consuming neighbourhoods and, at times, seeming to threaten the entire city.

RCMP cruisers will escort groups of 50 vehicles at a time. Helicopters will watch from overhead. All intersections along the route will be controlled and blocked by police, to ensure no vehicles try to slip away from the convoy.

  • Evacuees leave Fort McMurray in the early morning May 6, 2016, after being stranded due to the wildfire. An ever-changing, volatile situation is fraying the nerves of residents and officials as the massive wildfire continues to bear down on the Fort McMurray area of northern Alberta.
 

Evacuees leave Fort McMurray in the early morning May 6, 2016, after being stranded due to the wildfire. An ever-changing, volatile situation is fraying the nerves of residents and officials as the massive wildfire continues to bear down on the Fort McMurray area of northern Alberta. (Jason Franson/Canadian Press)

To watchers it may look, perhaps fittingly, like a funeral procession. When they reach the city, one of the first neighbourhoods they'll pass is Thickwood, on the right, where most homes were untouched by the fire.

They'll cross the Grant MacEwan Bridge over the Athabasca River, where down to the left they'll pass MacDonald Island Park, the refuge where the city set up an evacuation centre early in the week, before it, too, was evacuated.

They'll roll south, with the hills around Abasand to the right and the downtown core to the left.

Climbing the hill out of the river valley, they'll pass Beacon Hill, where hundreds of homes were lost. Atop the hill they will pass the ruined hulk of the Super 8 Motel, a Shell station that exploded in a fireball, and a trailer park that burned to ashes.

South past the airport, at some point they'll clear the fire zone, and the convoy will be released by police. From there, many people will make their way to Edmonton or Calgary, to be housed in evacuation centres or with family or friends.

Police say that if weather, fire and road conditions remain favourable, all of the estimated 1,500 vehicles will be moved through and out of the city Friday.

The fire, which continues to burn out of control, had scorched through more than 100,000 hectares by Friday morning.

When the city was evacuated on Tuesday, about 25,000 residents headed north, where oilsands companies put many of them up in work camps.

Premier Rachel Notley said about 7,000 of those people were evacuated Thursday on flights that took off from oil company runways near two of the camps. The province hopes to fly another 5,500 people out Friday.

Highway convoys are expected to move 500 cars and trucks through the city by the end of the day, Notley said.

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'Tragedy, layered on tragedy': Girl, 15, killed in Fort McMurray evacuation

One of a set of triplets, Emily Ryan described as affectionate 'old soul' who loved books

By Mack Lamoureux, CBC News, Posted: May 06, 2016 3:00 AM MT, Last Updated: May 06, 2016 8:53 AM MT,

Emily Ryan [second from left) on the day of her parents' wedding.The Ryan family would gladly let the fire take their Fort McMurray home, if it meant getting back what the fire already took — Emily.

"Ultimately, it's still a shock, the grief comes in waves," said Chelsi, Emily Ryan's sister. "It's tragedy, layered on tragedy."

On Wednesday Emily Ryan, 15, was like many others, forced to flee Fort McMurray.

She joined Aaron Hodgson, her stepmother's nephew, in an SUV.

Highway 881 was busy, but RCMP say traffic was still moving at highway speeds as people tried to put distance between themselves and the fire.

At around 1:30 p.m. the pair had all but escaped the fire when, just outside of Lac La Biche, the SUV collided with a tractor-trailer.

Both were killed on the scene.

The crash ignited a massive fire that closed the highway and put up plumes of smoke that could be seen kilometres away.

CrashA logging truck continues to burn beside highway 881 where it collided with an SUV. (Supplied: Stephen Barkley)

Emily's father, Cranley Ryan, a Wood Buffalo firefighter, rushed to the scene when he heard about the crash, Chelsi said. 

Their father has been relieved from active duty in order to be with his and the Hodgson family in Edmonton, she said.

Emily, one of a set of triplets, loved books, her sister said.

Side by side on her bookshelves sat the first editions of Harry Potter. Almost any dollar Emily was able to scrounge would go toward putting a new book on her shelf, Chelsi said.

"She was loving, always hugging or cuddling, and she loved to be the centre of attention," Chelsi said. "She has a beautiful singing voice and she was a wonderfully creative person."

Chelsi described her sister as an old soul. 

"She was always well beyond her years in maturity," she said. "We're sure she's not very happy either about being 15 forever." 

The fire in Fort McMurray has forced 80,000 from their homes and still rages on.

Many neighbourhoods are still threatened and the fire is growing. As of Thursday evening, the size was estimated to be 85,000 hectares.

While the worst may be yet to come, little else matter for the Ryans. 

"There's lots of grief to go around, but ultimately anything we lose is just stuff," Chelsi said. "We'd let it go a thousand times for Emily to be with us."

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