Residents of some Fort McMurray neighbourhoods are frustrated that, two months after others started moving back to the northern Alberta city, they still haven’t been told whether they can return home or start to rebuild.

Sandra Legacy, a resident of the hard-hit Abasand neighbourhood, lost her home in the fire that forced the city’s 90,000 residents to evacuate in early May. Residents started returning to the city June 1st.

“People throughout Canada think that Fort McMurray is back to normal,” she said. “We are so far from normal.”

Legacy said she realizes there are safety and environmental issues to consider, but she doesn’t understand why it has taken so long for officials to start clearing debris from Abasand.

Legacy pointed out that Canadians have donated generously to disaster relief – a total figure is expected to be announced Wednesday – and she wants to see the money used to remove debris. “Help us clean up this mess!” she said.

Adding to Legacy’s anxiety is an insurance policy with a clause that requires her to start rebuilding within one year of the disaster.

Jennifer Skinner’s Abasand home is still standing, but she too hasn’t been told when – or if -- she will be allowed to move back. She’s allowed to visit, but not to take items like her baby boy’s drum set and recliner.

Skinner said she wants answers. “Am I going to be spending Christmas with our two-year-old in our apartment that we have rented or spending it at home here with our family and friends?”

In the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo’s latest update, Deputy Director of Emergency Management Chris Graham said the region needed to finalize a safety plan before debris-removal could start in the neighbourhoods of Abasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways.

The region said in that update that building permits for the neighbourhoods cannot legally be issued until the province’s Chief Medical Officer of Health deems them fit for habitation, a point that Wood Buffalo reiterated in an email to CTV Edmonton on Tuesday.

Wood Buffalo’s July 21 update stated debris removal is “anticipated to be complete by September 30, 2016.”

Flooding cleanup continues

Meanwhile, residents have who have moved back into their homes after the month-long evacuation in May found their homes flooded over the weekend. At least 50 homes were affected.

“All my clothes (were) ruined,” said April King, who lives in a basement apartment. “I’m trying to wash them but it has a smell to it. All my bedroom furniture, everything is gone.”

Rob Roy, a restoration contractor with DKI, said he was helping 400 residents deal with fire and smoke damage when he got dozens of flood related calls on Sunday.

“They have about seven feet of water in this basement,” he said, pointing to one home inundated on Sunday. “The fridge is floating,” he added. “It’s pretty crazy.”

Roy said Fort McMurray is a “strong community pulling together to do what we’ve got to do” but “weather wise it would be nice (to have) a break.”

Municipal Councillor Keith McGrath also told CTV News Channel on Tuesday that although his city could “use a break,” the cleanup will “make our community stronger.”

“We’re not quitters,” he added.

With a report from CTV Edmonton’s Breanna Karstens-Smith