Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

B.C. Premier, Forests Minister, To Tour Several Wildfires, Including Kelowna

The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2017 12:58 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — British Columbia Premier John Horgan and Forests Minister Doug Donaldson are set to visit several Interior cities and towns as firefighters continue to battle scores of wildfires around the province.
     
    Horgan and Donaldson will visit Kamloops, Cache Creek, Ashcroft and Kelowna, where a wildfire that broke out Thursday was keeping hundreds of residents out of their homes.
     
    The Central Okanagan Regional District says the fire is 20 per cent contained and has charred just under five square kilometres of bush and trees in the Joe Rich community, about 25 kilometres east of Kelowna.
     
    Evacuation orders for about 600 people were reduced to alerts on Sunday, but orders covering just over 200 properties remained in effect and Highway 33 through the fire zone was closed.
     
    The wildfire service website shows seven new fires were sparked over a 24-hour period on Sunday, with two believed to have been caused by human activity, two by lightning and three under investigation.
     
    One of those was about 13 kilometres east of Squamish, along the Mamquam River, and although it was small, the wildfire service says more crews and equipment were due to be assigned to contain and extinguish it.
     
    The one-day tour by Horgan and Donaldson is meant to give them a better sense of efforts to control wildfires and get evacuees back to their homes.
     
    "People have been working around the clock to help those whose livelihoods and homes have been impacted by the fires. It's important for us to hear first-hand about the devastation and the work being done to get people back on their feet," Horgan says in a news release.
     
    A provincial state of emergency remains in effect.
     
    The wildfire service says 1,123 fires have been reported since the start of the fire season on April 1, burning just over 10,600 square kilometres of timber, bush and grassland.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Anonymous Donor Gives Hundreds Of Indigenous Works To B.C. Museum

    Anonymous Donor Gives Hundreds Of Indigenous Works To B.C. Museum
    At more than 200 pieces, the museum says it's believed to be the largest collection of northwest coast First Nations art to return to B.C. in decades.

    Anonymous Donor Gives Hundreds Of Indigenous Works To B.C. Museum

    Hong Kong: Where Dreams Come True

    Hong Kong: Where Dreams Come True
    A skyscraper-studded skyline and Disneyland are the two things that people most often associate with Hong Kong. Termed the Pearl of the Orient, Hong Kong turned out to be the place where some of my dreams were realised.

    Hong Kong: Where Dreams Come True

    Man Who Predicted Nine Last Elections, Including Trump: Polls Stink, I Was Right

    Man Who Predicted Nine Last Elections, Including Trump: Polls Stink, I Was Right
    He saw his friendships strained, his methods challenged, but in the end he was right again. Allan Lichtman has now predicted nine consecutive presidential election results based on a model he created — topped off by Donald Trump.

    Man Who Predicted Nine Last Elections, Including Trump: Polls Stink, I Was Right

    Newfoundland And Labrador Residents Have Highest Rate Of Smoking In Canada

    The Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey found 13 per cent of the national population aged 15 and older were smokers in 2015 -- down from 14.6 per cent in 2013.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Residents Have Highest Rate Of Smoking In Canada

    British YouTube star Calum McSwiggan admits to vandalism after LA 'hate crime'

    British YouTube star Calum McSwiggan admits to vandalism after LA 'hate crime'
    LOS ANGELES — A gay YouTube personality has pleaded guilty to felony vandalism in an incident in which he claimed he was the victim of a hate crime.

    British YouTube star Calum McSwiggan admits to vandalism after LA 'hate crime'

    Political 'Refugees' From Trump Presidency Possible If Rhetoric Real: Observers

    Political 'Refugees' From Trump Presidency Possible If Rhetoric Real: Observers
    HALIFAX — An eminent Canadian political scholar says a Donald Trump presidency could prompt a flow of American political refugees akin to what happened during the Vietnam war.

    Political 'Refugees' From Trump Presidency Possible If Rhetoric Real: Observers