Thursday, May 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. wildfires: Cooler weather provides some help

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2021 05:03 PM
  • B.C. wildfires: Cooler weather provides some help

Cooler temperatures gave firefighting crews in British Columbia some reprieve on Friday as most wildfires burned in the southern half of the province.

Karley Desrosiers, fire information officer with the BC Wildfire Service, said 275 fires were burning Friday, down from about 300 earlier in the week.

"In the last 24 hours we're at less than 20 fires (started) whereas in the previous weeks they were sitting at 25 to 40 fires per day," she said.

Almost 2,500 square kilometres of land was burning in the southeastern part of B.C., Desrosiers said.

About five per cent of the fires were caused by human activity while the rest were attributed to lightning, Desrosiers said, noting 40 per cent of fires in an average year are linked to humans while lightning is to blame for the remainder.

There were 58 evacuation orders in place by late Friday afternoon affecting more than 5,000 properties. Almost 17,500 properties were on evacuation alert, meaning those residents were told to be ready to leave on short notice.

Evacuation alerts covering the resort municipality of Sun Peaks and several surrounding areas north of Kamloops were lifted as crews worked to contain a nine-square kilometre blaze. Elsewhere, an evacuation order posted earlier this week in southeastern B.C. for nearly 200 properties along the Slocan River was downgraded to an alert for most residents.

Drive BC, an online travel information system, said Highway 1 north of Hope had reopened, three weeks after it was cut off by a wildfire that destroyed the village of Lytton. Desrosiers said that wildfire was a 156-square kilometre blaze and was still aggressive on its northern flank, prompting evacuation orders for the community of Spences Bridge and surrounding First Nations.

Evacuation orders were also expanded around the roughly 20-square kilometre Nk'Mip Creek fire in the south Okanagan and another burning at the north end of Shuswap Lake, north of Sicamous.

More than 100 firefighters from Quebec were set to arrive in B.C. on Friday and head to the Okanagan region, while a crew of 100 from Mexico is due on the weekend. A Canadian Armed Forces contingent was also in the Okanagan before being deployed to various fires.

MORE National ARTICLES

Toronto police charge 35 year old Munish Puri with sexual assault

Toronto police charge 35 year old Munish Puri with sexual assault
Puri has been charged with harassment by repeatedly following another person and sexual assault. 

Toronto police charge 35 year old Munish Puri with sexual assault

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?
With more than one million doses of COVID-19 vaccines arriving in May, British Columbia health officials say they are looking at whether they can reduce the 16-week wait time between first and second shots for most people.

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?

Rising Metro Vancouver home values prompts sellers

Rising Metro Vancouver home values prompts sellers
The board reports there were 4,908 residential home sales in its 15 regions in April, a 342 per cent increase from the same month last year.

Rising Metro Vancouver home values prompts sellers

Racist incident hotline to be created in British Columbia

Racist incident hotline to be created in British Columbia
In Vancouver, anti-Asian hate crimes have increased over 700% in 2020 compared to the previous year.

Racist incident hotline to be created in British Columbia

Rewrite federal gun bill, victims' families urge

Rewrite federal gun bill, victims' families urge
In a letter sent to Liberal MPs, they add their voices to a chorus of opponents who say federal Bill C-21 will not rid Canada of the scourge of deadly shootings.

Rewrite federal gun bill, victims' families urge

All MPs must better support assault victims: PM

All MPs must better support assault victims: PM
Trudeau says he believes it's important for "everyone" to take a more trauma-informed approach to dealing with victims and those who work with them on the front lines.

All MPs must better support assault victims: PM