Saturday, March 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Wildfire Service Says Some Campfire Bans Could Be Gone By The Weekend

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2018 12:56 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The BC Wildfire Service says cooler, wetter weather in the forecast means some of the campfire bans in effect across British Columbia could be lifted soon.
     
     
    The wildfire service says it is evaluating which bans are still necessary and expects to release more details soon.
     
     
    A tweet posted by the service says campfire bans currently in place for the Prince George, Cariboo and Kamloops fire centres will likely be rescinded before this weekend, while bans in other parts of the province could be partially lifted. 
     
     
    Currently, open fires and campfires are banned in all six of B.C.'s fire centres, although fires no larger than a half-metre by a half-metre have been permitted in the Fort Nelson and Peace forest districts since late last month.
     
     
    The fire danger rating in B.C. has fallen significantly in recent weeks, but the wildfire service still shows much of Vancouver Island, the inner south coast, Kitimat and Bulkley-Nechako regions remain at a high to extreme risk. 
     
     
    Just over 2,000 wildfires have been sparked across B.C. since Apr. 1, charring more than 13,000 square kilometres of timber, and 34 fires of note are still burning, although the wildfire service says one of the largest, just north of Fraser Lake, is not likely to spread more.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    25-Yr-Old Man Dustin Duthie Charged With Murders Of 3 People In Calgary, Bodies Found In Two Homes

    25-Yr-Old Man Dustin Duthie Charged With Murders Of 3 People In Calgary, Bodies Found In Two Homes
    Dustin Duthie, who is 25, faces three counts of second-degree murder.

    25-Yr-Old Man Dustin Duthie Charged With Murders Of 3 People In Calgary, Bodies Found In Two Homes

    Federal Government Stalls On Release Of New Canadian Citizenship Guide

    Federal Government Stalls On Release Of New Canadian Citizenship Guide
    OTTAWA — It's been more than two years since work began on revising the controversial study guide for Canada's citizenship test, but the federal government says it needs more time to work on the publication and has no set timeline for release.

    Federal Government Stalls On Release Of New Canadian Citizenship Guide

    Police Searching For Van With Man's Body Stolen From Red Deer Funeral Home

    Police Searching For Van With Man's Body Stolen From Red Deer Funeral Home
    Mounties in central Alberta are looking for a van stolen from a funeral home that had a body inside.

    Police Searching For Van With Man's Body Stolen From Red Deer Funeral Home

    Alberta Mom Served Cleaning Solution Instead Of Latte, McDonald's Says Sorry

    Alberta Mom Served Cleaning Solution Instead Of Latte, McDonald's Says Sorry
    A southern Alberta mother who is pregnant with her third child says she was served a cleaning agent from a McDonald's restaurant instead of the latte she ordered.

    Alberta Mom Served Cleaning Solution Instead Of Latte, McDonald's Says Sorry

    Lightning Storms Across B.C. Raise Tension As Wildfire Danger Climbs

    Lightning storms sweeping across British Columbia sparked 132 small fires on Tuesday alone, with more  unstable weather is in the forecast for Wednesday.    

    Lightning Storms Across B.C. Raise Tension As Wildfire Danger Climbs

    Vancouver's Rio Theatre Secures $375,000 From City In Conditional Grant

    Vancouver's Rio Theatre Secures $375,000 From City In Conditional Grant
    The owners of one of Vancouver's last independent theatres have been thrown a lifeline by the city with a conditional grant of $375,000.

    Vancouver's Rio Theatre Secures $375,000 From City In Conditional Grant