01/01/2026
This is my home community.
Pimicikamak Cree Nation (Treaty Five Territory, Cross Lake) is under a State of Emergency and a rapidly escalating Public Health Emergency due to a prolonged power outage during extreme winter conditions.
In –30° weather, this is not a technical issue.
It is a humanitarian and public health crisis.
Hundreds of homes remain without electricity or heat.
Water tanks are frozen.
Sewage systems are failing.
The community has now run out of potable water.
Families are relying on candles and portable generators for warmth and light, creating severe risks of fire, carbon monoxide poisoning, and medical emergencies. One trailer fire has already destroyed a critical water asset.
Even when power is restored, the crisis will not simply end.
Frozen pipes are expected to burst, causing flooding, home damage, displacement, and prolonged loss of water — extending the emergency well beyond power restoration.
Elders, infants, children, and medically vulnerable citizens are most at risk.
Many families have already been evacuated to Norway House and Thompson. With hotels in Thompson now full, Pimicikamak is working with the Canadian Red Cross to relocate evacuees to Winnipeg. Evacuation buses and flights are ongoing. Other families have fled on their own at personal expense to protect their children and Elders.
Approximately 600 generators were expected to arrive, many of them second-hand and requiring repair. With more than 1,200 homes in the community, generators are not a sufficient or sustainable solution.
Manitoba Hydro has confirmed the damaged transmission line crosses two rivers and is difficult to access due to ice conditions. Repairs may take several days or longer. Pimicikamak has already taken the initiative to build a helipad to support access — a step that should not have been necessary.
For years, Pimicikamak has warned that aging transmission infrastructure and refusal to relocate the line along the highway would result in exactly this kind of prolonged outage. Those warnings were not acted on.
As stated by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, this crisis reflects systemic infrastructure failures that repeatedly place First Nations lives at risk.
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WHAT IS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
• Emergency power solutions and additional generators
• Potable water delivery
• Sanitation mitigation supports
• Evacuation resources (buses, flights, accommodations)
• Fire protection and medical safety supports
• Clear timelines, accountability, and a permanent transmission infrastructure solution from Manitoba Hydro
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WHO TO CONTACT / HOW TO HELP
Primary coordination and verified information:
Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC)
📧 [email protected]
AMC, along with Pimicikamak Cree Nation leadership, is calling on:
• Manitoba Hydro
• The Province of Manitoba
• Indigenous Services Canada
to engage directly and urgently, deploy emergency resources immediately, and commit to long-term infrastructure solutions.
If you can assist with donations, logistics, transport, housing, supplies, or advocacy, please coordinate through AMC or follow official Pimicikamak and AMC updates to ensure help reaches the right place safely.
Silence is not neutral.
Every hour of delay deepens this crisis.
Our people are not abstract.
Our elders are not expendable.
Our children are not collateral.
This is a public health emergency, and it requires immediate, coordinated action.
Êkwa kîspin ka-nîsohkamâtan pimâtisiwin, mâna kîya nîkân — and so, when life is threatened, we step forward together.
—Kanipawit Maskwa