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2025 Wildfire Season



An interesting aspect to the fires in Saskatchewan and Manitoba is that right now almost all of 3rd Division’s forces are otherwise engaged supporting the G7.

Any significant ground forces past sub unit size would likely have to come from Canada.
The general public still thinks the CAF should be there to fight fires and swoop in on a moments notice to provincial demands.
 
Elizabeth May managed to put together an interesting idea (but not exactly a new one), what are everyone's thoughts on it?


I fear I might have to start reporting myself as a smoker to my doctor, gotten use to all the smoke in the air here in Ottawa.
I'm actually not opposed to this but I think it needs some more detail. Our premier Wab said almost the same thing. He thinks a national fire fighter organization needs to be looked at.
 
I'm actually not opposed to this but I think it needs some more detail. Our premier Wab said almost the same thing. He thinks a national fire fighter organization needs to be looked at.
instead of the coast guard its the "land guard" a national level organization would make sense in a way but I think this is pushing on the feds a provincial problem. By this i mean we are having the feds having to foot the bill and if her idea pans out, create an entire organization dedicated to just disaster response thats happening more and more because of a lack of preparedness and planning from provinces.

Watching CTV they interviewed one chief from Manitoba, represents a community of 10,000, and they have 1 fire truck. Now this brings up a million questions on funding etc but more importantly I see it has the province not making sure communities are prepared.
 
Elizabeth May managed to put together an interesting idea (but not exactly a new one), what are everyone's thoughts on it?


I fear I might have to start reporting myself as a smoker to my doctor, gotten use to all the smoke in the air here in Ottawa.
shades of the peace corps. We don't need to waste valuable and scarce defense dollars on a feel-good programme for left-wing peaceniks.
 
So yesterday one of the chiefs of an evacuated northern reserve was wondering why some of his band were kicked out of hotels.

Let me see....the last time this happened they were housed in the RBC Convention Centre where they urinated and defecated in the stair wells, among other things. The RBC is not putting up with that this time round.
Having to extract witnesses from remote FNTs into a city for trials, I can relate.

Watching CTV they interviewed one chief from Manitoba, represents a community of 10,000, and they have 1 fire truck. Now this brings up a million questions on funding etc but more importantly I see it has the province not making sure communities are prepared.
It's not uncommon for some northern Ontario FNTs to have a fire truck, but no heated place to store it, which makes it kinda useless in the winter.

FNTs get caught up in the 'federal-provincial jurisdictional' tug-o-war.
 
Elizabeth May managed to put together an interesting idea (but not exactly a new one), what are everyone's thoughts on it?
That if anyone attempts it, they must stick to nuts-and-bolts domops ("assistance", not "aid") as the foundation and rigorously keep climate change politics and grifting out of it. Focus on wildfires, floods, SAR, earthquakes, severe storms. Recognize that direction/co-ordination, movement, and logistical support of people and resources that already exist is the keystone and don't unnecessarily burn money creating new coal-front teams.
 
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