Indigenous people 5 to 17 times more likely to die in a fire

A new Statistics Canada study shows Indigenous people across Canada are much more likely to die in a fire compared to the rest of the population. 

The study, commissioned by The National Indigenous Fire Safety Council (NIFSC) Project says the number is between 5 to 17 times the normal rate. 

“That number increases to over 10 times for First Nations people living on reserves. Inuit are over 17 times more likely to die in a fire than non-Indigenous people,” said Len Garis, Director of Research, National Indigenous Fire Safety Council Project. 

The study uses the 2011 Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort (CanCHEC) database, a population-based dataset following the population in the 2011 National Household Survey (NHS). 

Prior to these findings, Garis says the large gap in reporting in Indigenous communities meant there was no meaningful data when it came to fire related deaths or injuries. 

He adds many social determinants play into this — including poverty, inadequate housing, and housing without smoke alarms.

Garis is calling for the development of a national First Nations Fire Protection Act. 

He says it would address gaps to improve fire safety in Indigenous communities by establishing fire protection research and building standards.  

“All other jurisdictions in Canada including provinces, territories, and other federal jurisdictions like military bases or airports have established building and fire codes.”

Currently, the work is focused on First Nations populations living on reserves. 

He fears without a fire protection mandate or proper fire protection standards for Indigenous communities, services can be deprioritized or forgotten. 

The goal is to provide hands-on capacity building through training to help build skills for fire and life safety measures within First Nations communities and their leadership.   

One area in which the NIFSC Project is working to improve fire-related mortality and morbidity among Indigenous Peoples is through more accurate data collection. 

In addition, the creation of a national incident reporting system will eventually provide some missing data, adds Garis.

The organization is encouraging Indigenous communities to report fire incidents through this as they occur. 

He hopes by providing these services they will see a sharp decline in mortality rates and see them align closer with the rest of the population.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

GNWT releases draft of UNDRIP action plan

The territorial government is has released their initial draft for a United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Action Plan and are asking for public input. An announcement released today invited general members of the public to review and submit questions or comments on the initial draft of the plan.

AVENS’ national recognition champions aging in place in Yellowknife

After more than forty years of social innovation in older adult living and care AVENS was recognized with a special honour at the national volunteer awards for 2025. The organization has spent nearly half a century championing “aging in place” rights and access for older adults in the North. "We’re unique in the North and in Yellowknife to be able to provide that degree and variety of service and really focus on our mission, which is allowing seniors to age in place," said Colleen Wellborn

Dettah Ice Road closed for the season

The Northwest Territories department of Infrastructure has just closed the Dettah Ice Road for the season.

Feds pledge $4B for housing in Indigenous Northern, remote communities

The federal government says they are committing $4-billion for Indigenous housing in urban, rural and northern communities. The announcement was made in Behchokǫ̀ on Friday. The multi billion dollar plan, dubbed the Urban, Rural and Northern Indigenous Housing Strategy, intends to balance Indigenous-led funding agreements and open, project-based funding for Indigenous housing projects.

NorthWords NWT releases schedule and author list for 2026 festival

NorthWords NWT has released the schedule and visiting authors for their 2026 Writer’s Festival.