Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Battle to keep historic town wet and safe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2024 05:11 PM
  • Battle to keep historic town wet and safe

The British Columbia gold rush town of Barkerville is drenched, both from overnight rains and sprinklers dousing its timber buildings, some more than 150 years old.

It's part of an effort to save the historic park that is one of the Cariboo region's premier tourist attractions from the flames of the Antler Creek wildfire that is burning out of control about three kilometres away, said Stewart Cawood, Barkerville's public programming and media manager.

"Today is looking better with the rain that we had overnight, but with it being so close and fires being so unpredictable, even with all these protective measures in place, there's absolutely a concern we could lose the town," he said. 

The storms that have drenched the region are a mixed blessing, soaking the town but also bringing lightning that the BC Wildfire Service fears could cause another burst of wildfire activity in the north and parts of the south after weeks of hot and dry weather. 

Lightning is the cause of the vast majority of active fires burning across B.C. and a bulletin from the service says the province saw more than 38,000 strikes on Monday. The province's active fire tally surged past 400 on Tuesday, including more than 100 new fires detected in the past 24 hours.

In the Thompson-Nicola region, there was confirmation that the nearly 200-square-kilometre Shetland Creek fire had destroyed more than 20 structures in the Venables Valley, where it is burning out of control. 

Colton Davies, the district emergency operations centre information officer, said that included six primary residences, and emergency officials had met late Monday with people whose homes may have been lost. 

The Shetland and Antler Creek fires are among the four so-called "wildfires of note" in B.C., meaning they pose a threat to life or property or are highly visible. 

The 34-square-kilometre Antler Creek fire triggered an evacuation order for Barkerville, Bowron Lake Provincial Park and for the community of Wells, B.C., on Sunday.

Cawood said all visitors, non-essential staff and animals — including a cat, horses, goats and chickens — were evacuated from Barkerville before the order was made on Sunday. 

He said only BC wildfire crews and specially trained staff remained at the town, which was established in 1862 when prospector William Barker struck gold. The town's website says it features more than 125 heritage buildings, and it was declared a National Historic Site of Canada in 1924.

Barkerville was destroyed by a fire in 1868 before being rebuilt. Its protectors are doing what they can to avoid a repeat, saying on the town's Facebook page that "every drop helps" in the attempt to keep the town wet and safe.

"The sprinkler systems are running throughout the town, so the town is damp at the moment," Cawood said. 

In a post to social media on Monday, the wildfire service said heavy smoke in the region helped to "lessen wildfire behaviour" as groundcrews with heavy equipment established control lines, which are barriers used to contain or control a blaze. But, it noted, the fire may still increase in size and smaller fires may merge with the blaze.

It also said structure protection specialists have deployed systems that are used to create a "humidity bubble" to the site and the surrounding areas. The technique, which includes adding sprinklers to the roofs of buildings, aims to "increase the relative humidity and minimize how embers impact structures ahead of wildfires."

The number of wildfires in B.C. has soared from less than 100 two weeks ago, with the Shetland Creek fire in the Thompson-Nicola region, and the Aylwin Creek blaze in Central Kootenay also triggering evacuation orders and alerts.

Silverton, B.C., Mayor Tanya Gordon said the weather had cleared smoke near the Central Kootenay village, but it has added to residents' anxiety because people can now easily see Aylwin and Komondo Creek fires burning just south of the community.

Gordon said the village has not received any updates from the wildfire service on the status of the fires and residents are "anxious" as Highway 6 southbound out of town has been closed.

"The smoke has lifted, and it's becoming more real," Gordon said of the fire situation. "Something like this hasn't happened (in Silverton) for a long time."

She said residents were also nervous about a number of fires further north on Highway 6, the only major route out of the community.

"When this is over, we definitely need to sit down to think about evacuation routes (in the future)," Gordon says.

The Transport Ministry is discouraging non-essential travel to and within wildfire areas, to reduce road congestion associated with evacuations. 

Nearby fires have forced the closures of Highway 1 south of Cache Creek, Highway 26 near Wells and Barkerville, and Highway 6 south of Silverton.

Motorists are also warned to stay off routes from Jasper National Park in Alberta, as thousands of Albertan fire evacuees are forced to drive through B.C. to get to reception centres in Calgary and Grande Prairie.

Those evacuees are being directed back to their own province because B.C. has "no capacity to house Albertans," according to Alberta Emergency Management Agency managing director Stephen Lacroix.

B.C. has been dealing with an influx of travellers from Jasper since Monday night, when a fire forced park visitors and 4,700 residents of the town to flee west with little notice.

Photos and video on social media show a midnight cavalcade of bumper-to-bumper vehicles making slow progress through swirling smoke.

B.C. Minister of Emergency Management Bowinn Ma said in a social media post that the province would do everything it could to provide safe refuge for evacuees.

The ministry said around midday Tuesday that about 470 properties are on evacuation order in B.C., and another 3,100 were on alert, but called the situation "dynamic and everchanging."

An evacuation alert is meanwhile in effect for properties on the west side of Williams Lake, where crews stopped a fast-moving fire from advancing further into the central Interior community after it destroyed structures in an industrial area. The River Valley fire is now classified as "being held."

Environment Canada has issued rainfall warnings for parts of northwestern B.C., while the wildfire service says downpours may be accompanied by hail and erratic winds with the potential to fan fires and affect aerial firefighting and access to dirt roads.

Heat warnings that covered parts of the province for weeks have been lifted, replaced with special air quality statements due to wildfire smoke spanning the length of B.C.'s boundary with Alberta.

MORE National ARTICLES

White Rock woman charged in theft

White Rock woman charged in theft
A 36-year-old White Rock woman is facing several charges including break and enter, theft and possession of stolen goods, after an alert neighbour in Tsawwassen called police to report a robbery. Delta police say it happened around 4:20 this morning when the neighbour saw a man and woman removing property from the home's garage and putting it in a nearby minivan.

White Rock woman charged in theft

Hackers may have accessed 22 B.C. government inboxes, data on 19 employees: Farnworth

Hackers may have accessed 22 B.C. government inboxes, data on 19 employees: Farnworth
Twenty-two British Columbia government email inboxes with sensitive personal information on 19 employees may have been accessed during a cyber attack on the province's networks, the minister of public safety said on Monday. Mike Farnworth said there's no indication the general public's information was compromised and investigators have not identified any misuse of the information the criminals may have accessed.

Hackers may have accessed 22 B.C. government inboxes, data on 19 employees: Farnworth

Woman's body found in Chilliwack

Woman's body found in Chilliwack
Homicide detectives have taken over an investigation into the death of a 50-year-old woman in Chilliwack that they say is suspicious. R-C-M-P say officers responded to a sudden death at a city home on Sunday where they found the woman's body.

Woman's body found in Chilliwack

B.C. sets distance for drivers to steer clear of cyclists, scooter users, walkers

B.C. sets distance for drivers to steer clear of cyclists, scooter users, walkers
Drivers in British Columbia now have to meet minimum distances between their vehicle and people walking or riding on provincial roads.  The new rules start Monday and require drivers to stay at least a metre away from vulnerable road users if the speed limit is up to 50 kilometres an hour, and a metre-and-a-half at speeds over that. 

B.C. sets distance for drivers to steer clear of cyclists, scooter users, walkers

Feds create $530M fund for cities to adapt to climate change

Feds create $530M fund for cities to adapt to climate change
Canadian cities and towns facing an uphill battle to stave off the effects of climate change will share more than half a billion dollars from a new federal adaptation fund. The Local Leadership for Climate Adaptation initiative will offer up to $1 million to local governments for projects that upgrade or adjust their infrastructure and natural environment to be more protected from extreme weather events including floods, fires and major storms.

Feds create $530M fund for cities to adapt to climate change

Elenore Sturko leaves BC United party for Conservatives to 'defeat the NDP'

Elenore Sturko leaves BC United party for Conservatives to 'defeat the NDP'
Another BC United member has left the party to join the Conservative Party of BC just months before the provincial election. Surrey South MLA Elenore Sturko says in a statement that she's joining the provincial Conservatives to "rebuild the coalition that's needed to defeat the NDP." 

Elenore Sturko leaves BC United party for Conservatives to 'defeat the NDP'