Sask. village loses arena in late night 'inferno'
The Village of Liberty is grieving the loss of its rink after it fell victim to a late night 'inferno' over the weekend.
“It was an inferno. It was a total inferno. All you could see was flames.”
That’s how Gordon Shields described the sight of the Liberty Rink ablaze late Saturday night.
Shields, who has lived in Liberty since 2007, was the first to notice the fire.
“My wife and I were laying in bed, reading a book and all the sudden I heard this weird noise. It sounded like a tornado a long ways away,” he said.
“I looked out of our upstairs bedroom window and I saw the arena was in flames on the west end.”
The fire spread quick, with flames reaching 60 to 80 feet high.
“By the time I got out here, which was minutes, the fire had spread from the west end down to the east end,” Shields explained.
“It’s a 200 foot building I suppose, so it was moving fast.”
According to Shields, firefighters were on the scene within minutes.
“So there was about six to eight fire trucks here and probably 20 fireman,” he said.
In addition to Liberty's fire department, fire crews from Holdfast, Imperial and Davidson responded to the blaze.
"It's amazing, the amount of support you get from local small towns. It's unbelievable. Like without them we wouldn't have had as much luck last night as we did," Liberty fire chief Kyle Mooney told CTV News.
However, even with the quick response, nothing could have saved the rink.
“They had it under control pretty quick but the arena was gone, there was nothing they could do," Shields said.
"So they were just making sure they saved the pump house and making sure nothing spread.”
The primary concern was the community's water treatment plant, which was full of chemicals and located right beside the blazing inferno.
Fortunately, it was undamaged during the fire.
"Our main focus last night and this morning was just saving that treatment plant because without that we have no water in town," Mooney said.
Liberty’s arena had been condemned for the past several years. Regardless, the loss is being felt in the small community.
“It's a pretty big loss. It hasn't been used much in the last five years. But when it was up and running, a lot of local kids would use it lots and it was a nice place to hang out and have fun as a kid," Mooney explained.
The community remembers the rink as a gathering place with cherished memories.
“We always had good times in the arena with recreational skating,” Shields said.
“This building will be missed.”
While one of the community’s main markers may be gone, Shields explained that he’s just thankful for the actions of the volunteer fire crews.
“Kudos and thank you to the volunteer firefighters, they got here quickly,” he said. “They had control of it within probably 20 minutes, so a job well done to them.”
According to Mooney, no injuries were caused by the fire.
"Everyone went home safe. Everyone is safe right now. So that's all we can be thankful for."
Liberty is located approximately 115 kilometres northwest of Regina.
With files from CTV News’ Luke Simard.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Prince Harry a no-show on first day of court showdown with British tabloid publisher
Prince Harry's phone hacking trial against the publisher of the Daily Mirror kicked off Monday without him present -- and the judge was not happy.

Depression, living in a disadvantaged neighbourhood may lead to faster aging: study
A new Canadian-led study has found that feeling depressed, along with living in a disadvantaged neighbourhood, may lead to premature aging.
What about Kristen, Leslie's rights, asks lawyer for Bernardo victims after transfer
Paul Bernardo should be returned to a maximum-security prison, the lawyer representing the families of his young murder victims said as he called on the Correctional Service of Canada to be more transparent about what led to his transfer to a medium-security facility in the first place.
Trudeau and ministers to provide update as wildfires burn in multiple provinces
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to provide an update on the wildfires that have forced thousands of people from their homes and caused widespread property damage in several provinces.
Here's how 'code-switching' can hurt Black, Indigenous people in Canada
In a dominant white culture some Black, Indigenous and racialized people are 'code-switching' which could harm their mental health, one expert says.
Watchdog's relations with spy community 'particularly strained' over last year
Newly released documents say the intelligence community's relationship with its key watchdog has been particularly strained over the last year due to a 'level of resistance' to scrutiny.
Edmonton teen missing after being swept away in North Saskatchewan River: police
A 14-year-old swimmer is believed to have been caught in a current and swept downstream in the North Saskatchewan River.
U.S. beats Canada 6-1, nets World Para hockey gold
Special teams played a difference on Sunday night as the United States scored two short-handed goals en route to a 6-1 victory over Canada in the World Para Hockey Championship gold-medal game.
Increase in mosquitoes 'a trend' across Canada this year. Here's why
Mosquitoes have always been pesky, but this spring it seems the bloodsuckers are thirstier than ever, a trend one expert says is increasing.