Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Extremely Dry' Level 4 Drought Declared For Lower Fraser And South Coast

The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2015 10:11 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Forests Minister says soaring temperatures and paltry rainfall have pushed the province's most heavily populated region to the highest alert level on the drought scale.
     
    Steve Thomson said the Lower Fraser and the south coast areas have been upgraded to drought level four, which is defined as extremely dry.
     
    "In the coming days and weeks it is likely conditions across the province will become drier," Thomson said Wednesday.
     
    If the situation gets bad enough the province may restrict personal water use and temporarily suspend commercial water licences in affected watersheds, said Wenda Mason, a provincial water management official.
     
    So far, no regulations have been introduced as the government has encouraged residents to voluntarily curtail water consumption.
     
    Mason said 10 millimetres of rain is forecast for northeastern B.C., but that would hardly be enough to end the drought conditions.
     
    The only other level-four drought region in the province is Vancouver Island, where concern is focused on the southern part of the region.
     
    Low water levels and high temperatures have also resulted in fishing restrictions, with closures being imposed or considered for nearly 100 rivers across the province, mostly on southern Vancouver Island and the central Interior.
     
    "Under these conditions fish seek cold-water refuge areas and become vulnerable," said Mike Ramsay, a provincial fisheries manager with the Forests Ministry. "Sport fish, such as rainbow trout, could have high mortality rates when caught in water above 20 degrees due to stress."
     
    A fish kill was reported in the Similkameen River on July 1, and an investigation revealed the incident was probably related to water temperature, Ramsay said.
     
    Dry conditions are also contributing to wildfires across the province, though the total number of blazes dropped to 175 on Wednesday from 200 a day earlier.
     
    Of the 10 fires that started on Tuesday, two were human caused.
     
    "This is a big concern to us," said Navi Saini of the BC Wildfire Service. "These fires are preventable and they do tie up valuable, finite resources."
     
    But she said an abnormally high level of lightning early in the season has caused a disproportionate number of wildfires since April 1.
     
    Since then, nearly 1,100 fires have razed about 2,900 square kilometres of land, costing the province about $120 million, or almost double its annual firefighting budget.
     
    A campfire ban remains in place across the province, with the exception of Haida Gwaii and the fog zone, a narrow strip along the extreme west coast of Vancouver Island.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Investigating Death Of Girl, 11, On Manitoba Reserve As A Homicide

    RCMP Investigating Death Of Girl, 11, On Manitoba Reserve As A Homicide
    WINNIPEG — An 11-year-old girl on a northern Manitoba reserve appears to have been killed by someone, and not a bear as some people believed, RCMP said Friday.

    RCMP Investigating Death Of Girl, 11, On Manitoba Reserve As A Homicide

    Calgary Woman Gets 18-Month Conditional Sentence For Trying To Bribe Juror In Husband's Trial

    Calgary Woman Gets 18-Month Conditional Sentence For Trying To Bribe Juror In Husband's Trial
    CALGARY — A Calgary woman has been handed an 18-month conditional sentence for trying to bribe a juror in her husband's sex assault trial.

    Calgary Woman Gets 18-Month Conditional Sentence For Trying To Bribe Juror In Husband's Trial

    Montreal Considers Becoming First Major Canadian City To Ban Shopping Bags

    Montreal Considers Becoming First Major Canadian City To Ban Shopping Bags
    Montreal is mulling a ban on plastic bags and the city would become the first major Canadian metropolis to adopt such a measure if it proceeds.

    Montreal Considers Becoming First Major Canadian City To Ban Shopping Bags

    Child Dies, Two Survive, Following House Fire In Remote Arctic Hamlet

    Child Dies, Two Survive, Following House Fire In Remote Arctic Hamlet
    IGLOOLIK, Nunavut — One child is dead after a fire in a housing block in a remote Arctic hamlet.

    Child Dies, Two Survive, Following House Fire In Remote Arctic Hamlet

    No Bail For Man Charged With 'Heinous' Beating Of Montreal Bus Driver: High Court

    No Bail For Man Charged With 'Heinous' Beating Of Montreal Bus Driver: High Court
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court says a man accused of violently beating a Montreal bus driver must return to jail while awaiting trial.

    No Bail For Man Charged With 'Heinous' Beating Of Montreal Bus Driver: High Court

    Judge Didn't Need To Watch Whole DVD To Know It Was Porn, Appeal Court Rules

    Judge Didn't Need To Watch Whole DVD To Know It Was Porn, Appeal Court Rules
    TORONTO — Ontario's appeal court says a judge who convicted a man of violating his supervision order didn't need to watch an entire program in court to know that it was pornography.

    Judge Didn't Need To Watch Whole DVD To Know It Was Porn, Appeal Court Rules