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Wadin Bay saved itself. Now Saskatchewan won't pay them back.

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Your neighbours saving their homes and the province balking

Morning from the junction — here's what's moving in Melfort.

You know, sometimes you hear a story and you just think, "Only in Saskatchewan." The one that's got everyone talking this morning isn't about the Mustangs, though they'll be back on the ice soon enough. It's about a group of folks up in Wadin Bay, which isn't far from our trading area up towards Nipawin. Last summer, when the wildfires were really hitting hard, these residents were told to clear out. Mandatory evacuation. But they didn't. They stayed, organized themselves, and spent their own money – thirty-nine thousand dollars, to be exact – to save their community from burning down.

### The Standoff Over Compensation

Now, they're looking to get that money back from the province, and it's not exactly a smooth process. They used their own equipment, their own fuel, and their own time to do what they felt needed to be done when the official response wasn't enough to secure their homes. Think about that for a second. These aren't professional firefighters. These are just people who saw a problem and fixed it.

* **The Cost:** Residents spent $39,000 of their own money.

* **The Action:** They defied an evacuation order to save their homes from wildfire.

* **The Issue:** Attempts to recover these costs from the province have stalled.

It makes you wonder, doesn't it? If the same thing happened here, say along the Carrot River flats just east of the city or near the Melfort Research Farm, would we be expected to foot the bill after protecting our own? Melfort has its own volunteer fire department, of course, but for smaller, more isolated communities, this is a real question about what support you can expect. It's not about being a hero; it's about being practical when your livelihood is on the line. And then getting caught in the paperwork.

This situation isn't just about Wadin Bay; it’s about how the province views the efforts of its citizens, especially in times of crisis. For us here in Melfort, especially with the rail line running right through town and our proximity to plenty of dry fields, it’s a reminder that self-reliance is often the first line of defence. And sometimes, you pay for it yourself.

The morning crew is diving into this. Check it out at mornings.live.

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More from Jack Lawson

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →