Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wildfire grows aggressively in southern B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2020 05:45 PM
  • Wildfire grows aggressively in southern B.C.

British Columbia's unusually quiet wildfire season ended abruptly Tuesday as a fire flared in the southern Okanagan, forcing hundreds from their homes.

Smoke from the blaze, above Skaha Lake near Penticton, was first spotted in the early afternoon and by midnight about 10 square kilometres of bush had been charred.

The Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen ordered the evacuation of 319 properties in the path of the fire.

The City of Penticton also issued evacuation alerts for 3,669 properties on its southeast side and further alerts cover another 116 properties in the Upper Carmi area and Skaha Bluffs Provincial Park.

The B.C. Wildfire Service says the blaze is burning in steep and rocky terrain and is uncontained, with more firefighters and structure protection teams being assigned.

A separate 18-hectare wildfire is also burning along Highway 33 between Beaverdell and Carmi and the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary has placed 44 properties on evacuation alert.

The wildfire service says the fire was likely sparked by lightning and it has provided aerial and heavy equipment support to the local fire department.

A cause of the larger wildfire near Penticton has not yet been determined, the wildfire service said on its website.

More than 100 fires have flared in the province over the last two days in the wake of lightning storms and a heat wave has raised the wildfire danger rating to high or extreme across most of southern and central B.C.

Penticton-area evacuees are familiar with out-of-control fires.

A large blaze in 1994 force 3,500 residents to flee and destroyed 18 homes, but a major emergency during a pandemic is something new.

The regional district had set up a reception centre in Penticton for evacuees with the need for physical distancing complicating the procedure.

Evacuees and residents whose properties are on evacuation alert were being urged to register online, if possible.

In the meantime, heat continued for another day in Penticton with Environment Canada predicting temperatures in the low 30s.

The city was among four Okanagan-area communities that set temperature records Tuesday, breaking a 57-year record with a high of 37.5 C.

The weather office says the heat should relent Thursday and showers are forecast by Friday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray
Press passes and television cameras, once powerful symbols of neutrality that helped protect journalists working in combat zones, are providing little defence for reporters and crews covering the escalating urban conflict in the United States.

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert
As pressure mounts on the federal and Nova Scotia governments to call an inquiry into one of the worst mass killings in Canadian history, the country's leading scholar on inquiries says Ottawa and the province should do the right thing and work together on a joint inquest.

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed
As long-standing anger about discrimination boils over in the United States, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canadians must recognize there is systemic racism in their own country.

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever
Home sales in the Greater Vancouver area continued their steep year-over-year drop last month amid confinement measures and physical distancing requirements related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker
Donald Trump adds fuel to the fire with his tweets with George Floyd's death at the hands of police officers in Minnesota. There are violent demonstrations all over the US and around the world in relation to race and police brutality.

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest
Some Facebook employees critical of CEO Mark Zuckerberg protested his decision not to do anything about incendiary posts that President Trump had placed on the giant social media platform over the past week.

Hundreds of unhappy Facebook employees stage a virtual protest