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FILE PHOTO: Franklin Drive in Fort McMurray, Alberta, on April 22, 2017. Alberta Health Services has issued an air quality advisory for Fort McMurray and other communities because of smoke from wildfires.Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail

Alberta Health Services has issued an air quality advisory for Fort McMurray and other communities because of smoke from wildfires.

The provincial health agency says the fires are burning north of Wood Buffalo National Park.

An Alberta government wildfire spokesman says there are three out-of-control fires burning about 250 kilometres west of Fort McMurray that are generating a lot of smoke.

AHS says even healthy people my suffer eye and throat irritation and shortness of breath.

The advisory also applies to the communities of Fort McKay and Fort Chipewyan.

The agency notes the smoke conditions may cause anxiety linked with last year's wildfire in Fort McMurray, which forced the complete evacuation of the city, and says people can call a mental health hotline for help.

The blaze in May 2016 forced out more than 80,000 people and damaged or destroyed hundreds of structures.

Fort McMurray residents who lost their homes when wildfires ravaged the Alberta city are reflecting on the year since they were evacuated. As the city slowly rebuilds, one returnee says he looks for “silver linings” from the disaster.

The Canadian Press

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