Press Release
June 18, 2025
The Manitoba Wildfire Service is updating fire and travel restrictions for many parts of the province to Level 2, effective 8 a.m. Thursday June 19. Recent rainfall and a full green-up, which means grass is green with less dead, cured grass and full leaves on trees, have helped reduce the fire risk in some parts of the province. Other areas remain at high risk, with significant fire suppression operations continuing and restrictions still in place.
Fire and travel restrictions
Areas 1 to 5 and areas 8 to 22 are at Level 2. This means:
Fire and travel restrictions have been lifted for areas 6, 7 and Area A, which includes the following provincial parks: Asessippi, Beaudry, Birds Hill, Camp Morton, Duff Roblin, Grand Valley, Hnausa Beach, Hyland, Lockport, Lundar Beach, Manipogo, Margaret Bruce, Memorial, Netley Creek, Norris Lake, Oak Lake, Pembina Valley, Portage Spillway, Rainbow Beach, River Road, Rivers, Seton, St. Ambroise Beach, St. Malo, St. Norbert, Stephenfield, Trappist Monastery, Upper Fort Garry, Watchorn, William Lake, Winnipeg Beach, Yellow Quill.
The south part of Nopiming Provincial Park has reopened for permanent residents, cottagers and commercial operators. This includes Provincial Road (PR) 315, Bird Lake, Booster Lake, Flanders Lake and Davidson Lake. A closure and mandatory evacuation order continues for the rest of Nopiming Provincial Park and the entire areas of Wallace Lake, South Atikaki and Manigotagan River provincial parks.
Several provincial parks or park areas remain closed to all park users. Check www.manitobaparks.com for details and updates.
Anyone returning to reopened areas is advised to be prepared to evacuate again with little notice and should prepare an emergency go kit, as well as remain alert for evacuation notices.
Manitoba continues under a provincewide state of emergency. The provincial state of emergency under the Emergency Measures Act is in effect until June 26.
The Manitoba Wildfire Service reminds Manitobans to continue to act with great caution when outdoors. Human-caused fires put people and communities unnecessarily at risk but are preventable.
Since May 1, the Manitoba Conservation Officer Service has issued 93 charges and 31 warnings related to wildfires.
Fires of note
The Manitoba Wildfire Service continues to respond to 21 active wildfires across the province, a total of 124 wildfires to date, above the average for this date of 118 total fires.
Fires of note include:
East region:
West region:
North region:
Information and resources for evacuees
Manitoba continues to prioritize hotel accommodations for wildfire evacuees. As of this morning, all evacuees being supported in Winnipeg and requiring accommodations have been placed in hotels.
Congregate shelter sites at the Century Arena, the Eric Coy Arena and Red River College in Winnipeg and the site in Portage la Prairie will no longer be used at this time. The province will continue to maintain capacity at the Leila Soccer Complex to support evacuees requiring emergency shelter.
The Billy Mosienko Arena continues to serve as a 24-hour reception centre to provide ongoing support for wildfire evacuees in Winnipeg.
Visit MBReady at https://mbready.manitoba.ca for more information about emergency alerts and safety, as well as resources for evacuees such as:
For assistance, evacuees can contact Manitoba 211 from anywhere in Manitoba or by emailing 211mb@findhelp.ca. For more information, visit https://mb.211.ca/get-help-now/.
How Manitobans can help
The governments of Canada and Manitoba are matching donations made to the Canadian Red Cross 2025 Manitoba Wildfire Appeal to support those affected by the wildfires. Every $1 donated will become $3 to support the families and individuals most impacted by wildfires. Donation matching will be open for 30 days, retroactive to May 28. For more information, visit www.redcross.ca.
General wildfire information
To report a wildfire, call 911 or the TIP line toll-free at 1-800-782-0076.
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