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Today in Canada > News > Fire forces Puvirnituq, Que., to declare state of emergency as water shortage continues
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Fire forces Puvirnituq, Que., to declare state of emergency as water shortage continues

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Last updated: 2025/05/18 at 10:57 AM
Press Room Published May 18, 2025
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As people in Puvirnituq, Que., continue to struggle with a worsening water shortage, a fire has prompted the small village in Nunavik to declare a state of emergency.

The fire, which began Saturday at around 3 p.m., destroyed two housing units in the village of 2,100 people.

No injuries were reported but the firefighters’ inability to deal with the fire quickly due to a limited supply of water is what led to a state of emergency being declared, according to Radio-Canada.

Access to water has been limited since a pipe that connects the pump station to the treatment plant froze in mid-March.

In recent days, patients have had to be flown south due to the limited water supply in hospitals and there have been growing concerns about sicknesses like gastroenteritis (stomach flu) spreading rapidly because of many people are unable to wash their hands.

CBC News is reaching out to local authorities in order to get a better sense of what a declaration of a state of emergency entails.

“I feel for our community,” Puvirnituq Mayor Lucy Qalingo wrote on Facebook late Saturday night. “I don’t know what else to say.”

Earlier that day, hours before the fire started, the mayor had also taken to Facebook to say that “both governments should stop ignoring the high needs of everything in Nunavik” and issued an urgent call for help, writing: “Please don’t fail us.”

“If we don’t see changes from the result of the crisis we are going through, we are definitely nothing to them. What we are going through right now happens in third world countries,” Qalingo wrote in the Facebook post.

“We don’t have to beg for water. We are also Canadians. Forgotten Canadians.”

Crews spent hours trying to put out a fire at two residential units and the village’s lack of access to water made their work much more challenging. (Submitted by Louisa Kuananack)

CBC News also has reached out to the office of Ian Lafrenière — Quebec’s minister responsible for relations with the First Nations and the Inuit — as well as the office of Canada’s new Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty.

Earlier this week, Lafrenière said he had been in touch with the Kativik Regional Government and the Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services for the past three weeks and that his government was ready to provide assistance.

Two planes loaded with water left Montreal for Puvirnituq on Friday morning. The province’s ministry of public security said three more water deliveries were scheduled over the weekend, though weather conditions could affect those operations.

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