Crisis & Recovery Content Use Policy

MULTIMEDIA LIBRARY | CONTENT USE POLICY

You should assume that everything you see, read or hear within the Crisis & Recovery section of this website is copyrighted unless otherwise noted and may not be used without the written permission of the Municipal District of Lesser Slave River no.124 (MD124). MD124 neither warrants nor represents that your use of materials displayed within this section will not infringe rights of third parties not owned by or affiliated with MD124.

Images, videos and sound files of people or places displayed within the Crisis & Recovery section of this website are either the property of, or used with permission by, MD124. The use of these images and videos by you, or anyone else authorized by you, is prohibited unless specific permission is provided by MD124. Any unauthorized use of the images may violate copyright laws, trademark laws, the laws of privacy and publicity, and communications regulations and statutes.

When you submit any content for use within the Crisis & Recovery section of this website, you represent that you have a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive right (including any moral rights) and license to use, license, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, derive revenue or other remuneration from, communicate to the public, perform and display the content (in whole or in part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed, for the full term of any worldwide intellectual property right that may exist in such content.

ROYALS TOUR RUINS
Halfway through a cross-Canada junket, newlyweds Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge flew to the fire-ravaged region to speak with first responders and console those who lost their homes to the flames.
ORIGINS OF DISASTER
In Late October 2011, arson was revealed as the only possible cause of the fires that wrought such havoc on the Lesser Slave River region. This interactive map illustrates where and when these devastating wildfires began.

 

PICKING UP THE PIECES
The smoke has cleared and the fires extinguished, but the real work is now before us. What lessons have we learned from this tragedy, and what are we doing to repair the lives and livelihoods of those affected?