Recreation centre on Pigeon Lake 138A reserve destroyed by fire
CBC
Fire has destroyed a recreation centre that served as the main gathering place for residents on the Pigeon Lake 138A reserve, southwest of Edmonton.
Bernice Stoney told CBC News a fellow elder woke her up at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to tell her there had been smoke coming out of the Pigeon Lake Recreation Centre when he drove by.
She said she went there right away and found firefighters from the Samson Cree Nation's fire department responding to a fire burning inside the building.
RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney said the fire department requested police's assistance just after midnight on Monday.
She said a fire investigator was called to the scene and the fire's cause is still under investigation.
Stoney said the building, now beyond repair, with collapsed walls and ceilings, had served as the community's main gathering place since the early 1980s.
"It was a place where we came together as a community and we celebrated," she said.
The recreation centre contained a satellite office for the Samson Cree Nation, a community kitchen and gym.
Many community meetings, wakes and holiday meals took place at the centre, Stoney said.
The disaster has some community members calling for more emergency services closer to the reserve.
Though the reserve is close to a fire station that serves nearby Ma-Me-O Beach and other summer villages, it receives emergency services from Maskwacis, about 50 kilometres away.
That's because Pigeon Lake 138A is a reserve shared between the four First Nations of Maskwacis: the Samson Cree Nation, the Montana Cree Nation, the Louis Bull Tribe and the Ermineskin Cree Nation.
Orenda Kihcâyis-Stonechild, who grew up in the community and now lives in Edmonton, said she has been concerned about residents' access to timely emergency services for years.
The University of British Columbia student is pursuing a graduate certificate in Indigenous public health and has proposed conducting a research project on the impacts of long-distance emergency services in her home community.