How does Port aux Basques move on from Fiona? Together, says mayor - Action News
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How does Port aux Basques move on from Fiona? Together, says mayor

Port aux Basques Mayor Brian Button says residents coming together to support one another will be critical in moving on from the impact of post-tropical storm Fiona.

'We'll only be stronger if we stay together,' says Brian Button

A smiling man wearing polo shirt. The shirt features a logo for the town of Channel-Port aux Basques.
On on the first anniversary of post-tropical storm Fiona, Port aux Basques Mayor Brian Button shared a message of unity, saying the community will best move forward by coming together. (Alex Kennedy/CBC)

As Port aux Basquesmarked the anniversary Sunday of last year's devastating post-tropical storm, the town's mayor says residents supporting each other will be key for the town to move past Fiona's impact.

Speaking at a ceremony Sunday marking the anniversary, Mayor Brian Button thanked the several mental health counsellors in attendance for their help over the last year. In the past year, Button told the crowd, he's had to ask for help himself.

"It's been a tough year, there's no doubt. All of our communities have suffered together. Have suffered, lost in some way, shape or form," Button said.

"Don't be afraid to ask for help. Asking for help is not a sign of weakness, it's a a sign of strength. I'm not ashamed to tell you that I've asked for help, and nor should you be if you need to go get it."

Fiona's impact is still felt each day on Newfoundland's southwest coast,but many residents who spoke with CBC Newssay a strong support network throughout their communities is making things easier.

Button said Monday that kind of support will be critical as the community continues to move forward.

"We can all criticize each other, we can all be downon another, we can all talk about one another, but it won't solve anything. We'll only be stronger if we stay together, work together and be there for each other," he said.

"There's no textbook to all of this. There's no right way, there's no wrong way, there's just a way that we just try to come together and try to conquer. We will go forward. We will get there. We will go forward, for sure."

What's next?

But for many in the community, looking forward is much easier said than done especially when they're so close to the ocean.

Port aux Basques resident Denise Anderson, who lost her home to Fiona's fury, saidshe visits her old land "more than I should."

How Fiona changed Port aux Basques, N.L., and the people who live there

1 year ago
Duration 3:19
A year after post-tropical storm Fiona destroyed more than 100 homes in Port aux Basques, N.L., the community is still rebuilding and the residents are trying to heal.

"I always felt that I was stronger than anything. But I don't feel strong anymore. I'm known as the fixer in the family and I just don't feel that I can always be there for people now. It's just affected me that badly," Anderson said.

"I don't want nothing to do with the water."

A collage photo of two people. On the left, a woman with a blank stare stands in a hotel space, and on the right is a smiling man wearing a blue shirt with a tree of hope on the front.
Denise Anderson, left, and Calvin Bragg say it's taken time to recover from the effects of Fiona and more time is needed. (Alex Kennedy/CBC)

Somewho chose to stay are also having trouble finding a place to live. Many who lost their housesare still homeless, and insurances haven't been paid out.

Calvin Bragg and his wife, Dorothy,lost their home of 49 years. They bounced around the province, with stops in Stephenville, other surrounding communities and even as far as St. John's, before they were able to find a new place to live nine months later.

The number of homes in Port aux Basques will also continue to shrink into the spring, as more than 50 homes considered too close to the water will be torn down to expand the town's coastline and create more of a buffer zone for future storms.

Port aux Basques, N.L., gathers to heal one year after Fiona's devastation

1 year ago
Duration 1:45
One year after the most devastating storm in Newfoundland and Labrador's history, residents of Port aux Basques consoled each other and reflected on what's been a challenging year for many.

"So many people displaced at one time, the housing is not here to accommodate so many people. It's such a long process to get somewhere. To get in somewhere that's satisfactory. It's not good," Calvin Bragg said.

"It took us almost a year to get in somewhere. You can't put people on the streets."

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With files from Danny Arsenault and CBC Newfoundland Morning

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