Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wildfires threaten western province

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jul, 2022 11:24 AM
  • Wildfires threaten western province

Canada's western provinces are dealing with a number of wildfires caused by warmer and drier weather.

The B.C. Wildfire Service is keeping an eye on the Nohomin Creek Fire, which measures more than 20 square kilometres and is burning just west of the Village of Lytton.

It says lower humidity will cause fuels to dry out, stoking the flames of the nearly week-old blaze that has already destroyed at least six properties.

Lytton was razed in a similar fire last year and many residents evacuated in 2021, still have yet to return home.

The Manitoba Wildfire Service says heat and hot weather have caused 45 blazes in the province with the largest being east of Mathias Colomb Cree Nation.

It says about 230 square kilometres have been burned, and the nearby community of Pukatawagan has been evacuated.

The service says rain has helped firefighting efforts in the southern half of Manitoba, but the northwest corner of the province remains a concern with new fires starting and heavy smoke obstructing suppression efforts.

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver turns himself in after 4 hit in B.C.

Driver turns himself in after 4 hit in B.C.
Mounties said in a news release Monday that the 77-year-old man is not in custody but is co-operating with investigators, and his truck has been seized for examination following the march on Saturday.    

Driver turns himself in after 4 hit in B.C.

Province launches preparedness plan for heat events, heat alert

Province launches preparedness plan for heat events, heat alert
Temperatures surpassed 40 C for days in last summer's so-called heat dome in B.C., resulting in almost 600 heat-related deaths, most of them elderly and vulnerable people living in buildings without air conditioning.    

Province launches preparedness plan for heat events, heat alert

First monkeypox case detected in B.C.

First monkeypox case detected in B.C.
The centre says its laboratory has confirmed the infection in a resident of Vancouver, but it is awaiting further confirmation by the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. It says in a statement that Vancouver Coastal Health is conducting public health followup on the case.

First monkeypox case detected in B.C.

Longtime northern B.C. MLA Jack Weisgerber dies

Longtime northern B.C. MLA Jack Weisgerber dies
Jack Weisgerber, who was energy, mines and petroleum resources minister in the Social Credit government of former Premier Bill Vander Zalm, and was B.C.'s first minister of native affairs, was 81 years old.

Longtime northern B.C. MLA Jack Weisgerber dies

Trudeau heads south as Americas confront realities

Trudeau heads south as Americas confront realities
As a cornerstone of Canada's economic growth, federal immigration policy strikes a delicate balance between economic, humanitarian and labour-policy priorities, all the while preserving public buy-in to keep the ever-present political dangers at bay, Selee said.    

Trudeau heads south as Americas confront realities

Evacuations in northwest B.C., as rivers rise

Evacuations in northwest B.C., as rivers rise
Flood watches were posted Sunday for the Dean River in the Fraser Plateau east of Bella Coola and for the Liard River and its tributaries around the northeastern B.C. community of Fort Nelson and along Highway 97 toward Watson Lake.

Evacuations in northwest B.C., as rivers rise