Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Tourism Industry Taking A Significant Hit Due To Wildfires

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2017 11:58 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — British Columbia's tourism industry is taking a hit with businesses reporting rising cancellations and decreased traffic over fears of wildfires.
     
    Maya Lange with Destinations BC, the province's tourism planning and marketing corporation, said Wednesday preliminary results from a survey of businesses in the Kootenay-Rockies region found that 32 per cent are anticipating losses due to perceptions of the fires.
     
    "We are very concerned. Just looking at the volume of visitation and the volume of trips that are taken by British Columbian and Albertan residents alone ... especially in the months of July and August, we think there will be a significant impact."
     
    She said one business in the region alone reported it has lost $100,000 due to cancellations in July.
     
    The Thompson-Okanagan region has been hardest hit by wildfires and Lange said 47 per cent of businesses in the area are reporting some sort of interruption this summer, such as cancellations or road closures.
     
    Barkerville Historic Town and Park, a provincially operated attraction, has also reported a 54 per cent decline in visits comparing July 7 to Aug. 21 this year to last year, which caused a 50 per cent drop in net revenue.
     
    "If Barkerville is down, the surrounding privately owned businesses that provide accommodations, hospitality, food and other activities will also be down and those impacts will be much harder on those private entities," Lange said.
     
    Businesses are encouraged to contact their customers and reassure them it is still safe to travel in an effort to avoid cancellations. Lange said businesses are also being told to share photos of their sites on social media so people can see the region is safe and accessible.
     
    Lange said Destinations BC has a marketing campaign underway to better inform travellers that most of the province remains safe to explore but it's expected that losses to the industry will be significant once the total numbers for the season are calculated.
     
    The BC Wildfire Service said there have been 1,154 fires sparked since April 1 burning more than 10,600 square kilometres of land, and there is no sign of fire activity slowing down soon.
     
    Although a 1,750-square-kilometre fire in the Thompson-Nicola region is now 50 per cent contained, fire information officer Ryan Turcot said unstable weather conditions bringing gusty winds has caused the blaze to spread.
     
    An evacuation order for an area south of Highway 24, including properties around Watch Lake, Horse Lake and Little Green Lake, was expanded as a result of the blaze.
     
    A wildfire burning south of the border in Washington state has also moved into B.C. toward the community of Newgate, which is about 90 kilometres southeast of Cranbrook.
     
    The fire was about 650 hectares in size on the U.S. side of the border and had spread to about 30 hectares in B.C. on Wednesday. Turcot said the wildfire service was working with its U.S. counterpart to fight the blaze and helicopters from both countries were waterbombing hotspots.
     
    Turcot said there is no rain in the forecast for the central and southern Interior over the next week to bring relief from hot and dry conditions expected this weekend, which poses a greater fire risk.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Body Found In Richmond, B.C.; Death Considered Suspicious

    Body Found In Richmond, B.C.; Death Considered Suspicious
      The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says the body of a man was found Thursday afternoon near the Fraser River (on Fraserwood Way).

    Body Found In Richmond, B.C.; Death Considered Suspicious

    Adults Exposed To Alcohol Before Birth Appear Prone To Health Conditions: Survey

    Adults Exposed To Alcohol Before Birth Appear Prone To Health Conditions: Survey
    VANCOUVER — Myles Himmelreich has struggled with significant joint pain since he was a teen, yet he didn't get a proper diagnosis of arthritis until he was in his mid-30s.

    Adults Exposed To Alcohol Before Birth Appear Prone To Health Conditions: Survey

    Three People In Vancouver Hospital After Series Of Stabbings: Police

    Three People In Vancouver Hospital After Series Of Stabbings: Police
    VANCOUVER — Three people were in a hospital with serious stab wounds following a series of separate attacks in Vancouver on Thursday.

    Three People In Vancouver Hospital After Series Of Stabbings: Police

    B.C. Good Samaritan Who Helped Save Family In House Blaze Joins Fire Department

    B.C. Good Samaritan Who Helped Save Family In House Blaze Joins Fire Department
    TERRACE, B.C. — A man who helped save a family from a house fire in northwestern British Columbia is now one of nine recruits to the fire department in Terrace.

    B.C. Good Samaritan Who Helped Save Family In House Blaze Joins Fire Department

    First-Ever Use Of Naloxone Kit By Transit Police Officer In New Westminster Saves A Life

    First-Ever Use Of Naloxone Kit By Transit Police Officer In New Westminster Saves A Life
    A very busy last weekend for Metro Vancouver Transit Police included the saving of a man’s life with the first use of a naloxone kit issued to Transit Police.

    First-Ever Use Of Naloxone Kit By Transit Police Officer In New Westminster Saves A Life

    Two-Thirds Of Snowmobilers Who Died In Avalanches Over Past 5 Years From Alberta

    VANCOUVER — All the avalanches that killed snowmobilers over the past five years occurred in British Columbia, but two-thirds of the victims were from Alberta.

    Two-Thirds Of Snowmobilers Who Died In Avalanches Over Past 5 Years From Alberta