Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rain, Cool Weather Dampen B.C. Wildfires Ahead Of Aid Arriving From Down Under

The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2015 11:48 AM
    VANCOUVER — Australian wildfire specialists were expected to arrive in British Columbia on Monday, just as residents of a lakefront community threatened by an aggressive fire were finally allowed to return home.
     
    The Puntzi Lake fire, about 130 kilometres west of Williams Lake in B.C.'s central Interior, has destroyed buildings on four properties, including a hunting-and-fishing resort and two homes.
     
    It is one of 221 active wildfires burning across the province, said provincial fire information officer Navi Saini, adding rain and cooler weather on the weekend may have helped decrease the wildfire situation.
     
    She said a provincewide campfire ban remains in effect.
     
    Karen Powell of the Cariboo Fire Centre said about 12 millimetres of rain fell on the Puntzi Lake fire over the weekend, allowing crews to attack the fire's edge with heavy machinery. She said the fire is now about 80 square kilometres in size and 30 per cent contained.  
     
    Al Richmond of the Cariboo Regional District said an evacuation order was lifted for 30 properties on the lake's southern shore, but the order remains effective for 60 other properties.
     
    "Things are looking better, but we're cautiously optimistic," Richmond said. "A couple of days of cool weather would really help us but a return to hot, dry weather and we get winds again, then we are concerned.”
     
    Richmond said people who were returning home Monday do not live in the same area where the buildings burned and will remain on evacuation alert.
     
    The smoke has cleared but the homes are without power, though BC Hydro was trying to restore it, he said.
     
     
    Saini said the Australian fire crews were expected to arrive in the province Monday afternoon.
     
    "For the most part, these 50 personnel are highly trained specialists more at the command and co-ordination side of things," she said, adding they will not be actively fighting fires.
     
    Sixteen of them will help co-ordinate fire camps, she said, and the others will perform jobs such as co-ordinating helicopters and analyzing fire behaviour. 
     
    "They will be briefed in Chilliwack on Tuesday and Wednesday this week before being sent out into the field."
     
    Last year, 73 Australians assisted wildfire efforts, costing B.C. about $2.5 million, she said.
     
    "We have a reciprocal agreement in place, so we in British Columbia have also offered help to Australia in previous busy fire seasons."
     
    Since April 1, the BC Wildfire Service has recorded 1,073 fires that have burned about 283,500 hectares and cost about $108 million to fight.
     
    In contrast, 477 fires had burned 24,000 hectares at a cost of $44 million at the same time last year, Saini said.
     
    About 2,500 people are currently battling wildfires, including 1,000 contract personnel, along with two amphibious aircraft from Ontario, she said.
     
    The long-term weather forecast is calling for widespread showers in many southern and central areas of the province, she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused In Chemicals Case Had Enough Materials To Make Homemade Explosives: RCMP

    Accused In Chemicals Case Had Enough Materials To Make Homemade Explosives: RCMP
    HALIFAX — An RCMP forensic scientist says the Halifax man at the centre of a high-profile chemical scare that led to evacuations in two cities had enough chemicals to make 11 different types of explosives.

    Accused In Chemicals Case Had Enough Materials To Make Homemade Explosives: RCMP

    B.C. Grand Chief Says Federal Government Officials Destroyed Legal Emails

    B.C. Grand Chief Says Federal Government Officials Destroyed Legal Emails
    VICTORIA — A federal government bureaucrat ordered the destruction of legal opinions over the potential of First Nations in British Columbia to reach land-claim agreements, the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs claims.

    B.C. Grand Chief Says Federal Government Officials Destroyed Legal Emails

    Pentagon Says Possible Live Anthrax Sent To Labs In Canada

    Pentagon Says Possible Live Anthrax Sent To Labs In Canada
    The U.S. Department of Defence says it has determined that possibly live anthrax was mistakenly sent to labs in Canada and Washington state, in addition to the numerous labs in the United States and abroad that were announced last week.

    Pentagon Says Possible Live Anthrax Sent To Labs In Canada

    Buzz In: Fairmont Chain Welcomes Pollinators To Bee Hotels Across Canada

    Buzz In: Fairmont Chain Welcomes Pollinators To Bee Hotels Across Canada
    TORONTO — One of Canada's largest hotel companies is buzzing with efforts to provide more homes for bees.

    Buzz In: Fairmont Chain Welcomes Pollinators To Bee Hotels Across Canada

    Candidates Suggest Federal Liberals Favouring Big-name Hopeful In Montreal Riding

    Candidates Suggest Federal Liberals Favouring Big-name Hopeful In Montreal Riding
    People vying for the federal Liberal nomination in one of the few remaining open ridings in Montreal are not-so-subtly suggesting the party is delaying the vote to favour a perceived star candidate who is a friend of Leader Justin Trudeau.

    Candidates Suggest Federal Liberals Favouring Big-name Hopeful In Montreal Riding

    Ex-Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau, Who Nearly Split Quebec From Canada, Dead At 84

    Ex-Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau, Who Nearly Split Quebec From Canada, Dead At 84
    MONTREAL — Jacques Parizeau, the blunt-talking sovereigntist premier whose strategic cunning came close to ripping Quebec out of Canada, has died. He was 84.

    Ex-Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau, Who Nearly Split Quebec From Canada, Dead At 84