‘Kin, not evacuees’: inside Kingston’s support for Kashechewan Cree residents

By Michelle Dorey Forestell, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Kingstonist.com More than a month after arriving in Kingston, residents from Kashechewan First Nation are still living in hotel rooms far from home, adjusting to unfamiliar routines, coping with uncertainty, and navigating the emotional strain of displacement. More than 250 people from the northern Ontario Cree community were relocated to Kingston beginning Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026, after a critical failure in Kashechewan’s water system left residents without safe drinking water. Many are considered ‘tier one’ or especially vulnerable evacuees, including elders, young families, and individuals with complex medical needs. At the centre of the local response is the Kingston Native Centre and Language Nest (KNCLN), which has been coordinating cultural supports, programming, and community connections for displaced people. For Executive Director Brandon…

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