Military team deployed to help Manitoba First Nation hit by power outage

2 weeks ago 2
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By Staff The Canadian Press

Posted January 9, 2026 5:43 pm

1 min read

 'Pimicikamak power outage highlights Indigenous infrastructure gap'

2:21 Pimicikamak power outage highlights Indigenous infrastructure gap

WATCH: Pimicikamak power outage highlights Indigenous infrastructure gap

The federal government has agreed to send in military help to a northern Manitoba First Nation where thousands have been forced to leave due to frozen pipes and sewage backup.

Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski says a specialized Armed Forces team is being sent to Pimicikamak Cree Nation for assessment and advisory support.

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Officials in the community are still determining the extent of damage to the more than 1,300 homes in Pimicikamak, nearly two weeks after a power outage led to the failure of critical infrastructure.

Pipes have burst, crawl spaces are filled with icy water, and at least 4,000 people were sent to other communities.

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Federal, provincial and First Nations leaders toured the community Wednesday and saw the damage.

The First Nation was also evacuated last spring due to wildfires.

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