Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Eyes on the weather as fierce wildfire rages, forces evacuations in northeastern B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2023 11:43 AM
  • Eyes on the weather as fierce wildfire rages, forces evacuations in northeastern B.C.

VANCOUVER — Showers on Saturday could sprinkle an aggressive wildfire that has forced more than two-thousand people from their homes in northeastern British Columbia, but forecasters say thunderstorms could sweep the parched region before any rain arrives.

Environment Canada says the thunderstorms in the Tumber Ridge and Dawson Creek areas are coupled with heavy smoke and temperatures almost 10 degrees above normal.

That could complicate efforts to fight the raging West Kiskatinaw River wildfire, which has burned 96 square kilometres of bush and timber east of Tumbler Ridge in the three days since it was discovered.

The extreme fire activity prompted the District of Tumbler Ridge to skip an evacuation alert Thursday and jump right to an order requiring all 2,400 residents to get out immediately and seek refuge in Dawson Creek or Fort St. John.

The B.C. Wildfire Service says the blaze is among 83 active wildfires in the province, including the now nearly two-square-kilometre fire that has closed the Vancouver Island highway connecting Port Alberni, Tofino and Ucluelet to the rest of the Island.

A four-hour, back road detour allowing limited movement in and out of the area will also be closed for much of the day as a vehicle is pulled from a lake along the rough route, but the wildfire east of Port Alberni is still listed as out-of-control, so it's expected the detour will reopen as soon as possible.

"The Province urges preparation and patience as long wait times are expected once the detour reopens," the Ministry of Transport said in a statement advising of the closure, which was planned to occur between 1 p.m. and 9 p.m. Friday.

"All travellers are urged to avoid travel along the detour route before, during and after the closure because commercial trucks will be queuing for passage," the statement said.

Officials told a news conference on Thursday that more than 5,000 square kilometres has burned since the start of the wildfire season on April 1, a total that Neal McLoughlin, superintendent of predictive services for the BC Wildfire Service, called "quite alarming."

Fire bans, including campfire bans, now cover most of the province, although campfires are still allowed in the northwest and southeast corners of B.C. and on Haida Gwaii.

It's the earliest, ever, that B.C. has restricted campfires, and the bans come as the unusually warm summer conditions set 20 daily high temperature records on Thursday, including a mark of 38.5 C in Lytton, making the Fraser Canyon community the hottest in Canada for consecutive days.

Environment Canada said rain was expected Friday and Saturday over much of southern B.C., with between five and 10 millimetres due over much of the south coast by Saturday, while Interior forecasts called for around the same amount between Cranbrook and the Prince George area.

The weather office shows warm dry conditions should to return next week, although forecasters were calling for a chance of showers in the area near the West Kiskatinaw River wildfire, beginning on Tuesday.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis
Surrey Memorial's emergency doctors originally published their own complaint letter on May 15, followed two weeks later by a letter from 36 women's health physicians outlining a "critical scarcity of resources" that contributed to the death of a newborn baby.

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis
Housing Ministry Ravi Kahlon said Tuesday the province will set construction targets for housing in Vancouver, the districts of West Vancouver and North Vancouver, Delta, Port Moody, Abbotsford, Victoria, Oak Bay, Saanich and Kamloops.

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam
Davinder Kaur, 43, was stabbed to death by her estranged husband Nav Nishan Singh in Sparrow Park, Brampton, on May 19. Emergency crews found the mother of four with "obvious signs of trauma", who died on the spot despite attempts by paramedics to save her life. 

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial
Dante Ognibene-Hebbourn, 23, was apprehended under the Mental Health Act after the February 26, 2022, attack on 24-year-old Harmandeep Kaur at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan Campus. He is now expected to reappear in court on June 12 to fix a trial date. 

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand
Matthew Dupre, 38, who allegedly gunned down Jimi 'Slice' Sandhu in February 2022, arrived in Bangkok on a special air force flight on Sunday night. Sandhu, who grew up in Abbotsford, was connected to the United Nation Gang, which was founded in the Fraser Valley in 1997.

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand

BC Health Ministry invests in roads

BC Health Ministry invests in roads
Health Minister Adrian Dix says the road safety grant program is especially important in rural and Indigenous communities, and preventing road-related injuries will lessen pressure on the province's health-care system.   

BC Health Ministry invests in roads