Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2023 03:44 PM
  • Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada
Hundreds of wildfires are burning across Canada, prompting widespread evacuations and blanketing cities in smoke. Here's a look at developments Wednesday:
 
Canada marks Clean Air Day with air quality warnings
 
Hazy skies in Quebec and Ontario prompted air quality warnings in Canada's most populated corridor as the country marked national Clean Air Day shrouded with the smoke from hundreds of wildfires.
 
Environment Canada's air quality health index listed Ottawa and Gatineau, Que., as the worst in Canada Wednesday morning, followed closely by the eastern Ontario cities of Kingston, Cornwall and Belleville.
 
Residents in those cities were told to limit outdoor activities and for those most vulnerable to the smoke, to avoid them altogether.
 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recognized the air quality statements on Parliament Hill saying people across the country are being affected, events are being cancelled and children are being kept inside at recess.
 
'Code red' air alerts in Washington
 
Officials in the U.S. capital have issued a "code red" air quality alert, as smoke from wildfires in Quebec and Ontario continues to drift south.
 
The D.C. Department of Energy and Environment describes the air quality as "very unhealthy" and is urging people to remain indoors if possible.
 
More than a dozen states in the northeastern U.S. are under similar alerts, with schools in New York City and Washington cancelling outdoor activities.
 
Poor visibility due to smoke was predicted to reach as far south as North Carolina by day's end.
 
Record Quebec fires lead to more evacuations
 
Officials say Quebec’s wildfire season is the worst on record and the number of evacuees is expected to rise to more than 15,000.
 
More than 150 forest fires are burning in the province, with just under 100 considered out of control.
 
Premier François Legault says about 11,400 people have already been forced from their homes because of the fires and thousands more will likely have to flee the northern Cree town of Mistissini.
 
The most troublesome areas, Legault says, are in northern Quebec and in the western Abitibi region, where significant rainfall isn’t expected until Monday.
 
Ontarians urged not to start campfires
 
As smoke from wildfires degraded air quality for millions of people across the province, Ontario Premier Doug Ford is urging everyone to refrain from lighting campfires.
 
Fifty-four wildfires are burning in Ontario and 29 are out of control.
 
Ford says half of the fires were started by lighting strikes and the other half were caused by human activity, such as not properly extinguishing campfires.
 
Officials say a lot of the smoke blanketing Ontario also is coming from wildfires in Quebec.
 
Huge fire in Nova Scotia 'being held'
 
Emergency officials say a record-breaking wildfire in southwestern Nova Scotia that has been burning for 11 days is no longer moving.
 
The province’s Natural Resources Department says the fire, which grew to be the largest on record in the province, is “being held” and is not expected to move if cool and wet conditions persist.
 
The fire, which started May 27 near Barrington Lake, destroyed about 60 homes and cottages and another 150 structures. About 6,700 people were forced to leave.
 
A construction industry leader says it could take years to rebuild.
 
Ottawa looking at national disaster agency
 
The federal government is studying options for creating a new national disaster response agency as Canada is experiencing its worst wildfire season in history.
 
A senior government source told The Canadian Press that discussions on a new approach are underway and include analyzing the merits of creating a Canadian version of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in the United States.
 
A new Canadian disaster response agency or team would not just be for fires, but for all disasters, including flooding and major storms.
 
Canada's disaster response plans currently involve different levels of government on a case-by-case basis.
 
The Canadian Armed Forces has repeatedly been called on to deploy soldiers and equipment to help. The military has warned, however, that its help in a disaster should be a last-ditch response after all other options are exhausted.
 
Wildfire closes key Vancouver Island route
 
A small but aggressive wildfire on Vancouver Island is burning beside the only major highway linking Port Alberni, Tofino and Ucluelet to the rest of British Columbia.
 
The route is closed until further notice as the nearly one-square-kilometre blaze spreads not far from Cathedral Grove, home to some of Canada's oldest and tallest trees.
 
The B.C. Wildfire Service says heavy equipment, helicopters and crews are attacking what is believed to be a human-caused fire.
 
Starting Thursday, campfires will be banned across most of B.C. as high temperatures and drought push the wildfire danger to high or extreme across Vancouver Island, the central Interior and the northeast.
 
The wildfire service is reporting more than 80 active fires in British Columbia.
 
Residents can return to N.W.T. First Nation
 
The K'at'lodeeche First Nation says residents can return to the reserve in the Northwest Territories more than three weeks after they were forced to leave due to a raging wildfire.
 
The fire is now classified as being under control, but the First Nation says it is still in a state of emergency.
 
There is no public access to the reserve. Power, water and sewer services have yet to resume.
 
The community was ordered to evacuate May 14 and the blaze damaged more than a dozen buildings, including the First Nation’s band office.

MORE National ARTICLES

BC to address non-consensual sharing of intimate images

BC to address non-consensual sharing of intimate images
Niki Sharma told the legislature in March that the government is proposing a law that would create new legal rights and remedies to stop the distribution of such images and to seek compensation for those who are harmed.  

BC to address non-consensual sharing of intimate images

B.C.'s Cache Creek becomes raging river as floodwaters rise: mayor

B.C.'s Cache Creek becomes raging river as floodwaters rise: mayor
B.C.'s River Forecast Centre has issued two flood warnings, its highest-level bulletin, while several lower-level flood watches and high streamflow advisories covered much of the province's northern, central and southern Interior on Wednesday.

B.C.'s Cache Creek becomes raging river as floodwaters rise: mayor

Bust results in seizure of cash and drugs: Kelowna RCMP

Bust results in seizure of cash and drugs: Kelowna RCMP
The officer stopped a green 1997 Toyota Corolla on April 29th after it failed to stop for a pedestrian crossing the street at a marked crosswalk. When the officer had the driver exit the vehicle on suspicion of driving under the influence, a clear baggy of suspected drugs fell to the ground.

Bust results in seizure of cash and drugs: Kelowna RCMP

BC temp records broken on Tuesday

BC temp records broken on Tuesday
Environment Canada says heat records were broken in eight different areas as a ridge of high pressure brought in warm spring weather. In Nelson, the temperature hit 30.2 Celsius, breaking a record set back in 1937.

BC temp records broken on Tuesday

No word on which Canadians will attend crowning of King Charles in London

No word on which Canadians will attend crowning of King Charles in London
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Governor General Mary Simon will be at Westminster Abbey this weekend as the King is officially crowned, but the rest of the official Canadian delegation largely remains a mystery.

No word on which Canadians will attend crowning of King Charles in London

Burglary suspect arrested in North Vancouver

Burglary suspect arrested in North Vancouver
R-C-M-P say a man in his 30s has been arrested and charged with break-and-enter after a burglary in North Vancouver. They say officers spotted a man a short distance away who matched the description of one of the suspects and seized electronic devices worth six-thousand dollars, which were then returned to the business.

Burglary suspect arrested in North Vancouver