Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Burns Bog Fire In Delta, B.C., 10 Per Cent Contained

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2016 09:49 AM
    DELTA, B.C. — The Burns Bog fire southeast of Vancouver was 10 per cent contained Monday morning, with crews hoping to fully contain the flames by the end of the day.
     
    Chief Dan Copeland of the Delta Fire Department said the blaze is between 50 and 70 hectares in size, and 90 firefighters from a number of jurisdictions were battling the fire.
     
    "We're hoping the winds don't pick up much more than they are right now," he told a news conference on Monday morning. "It's definitely improved from yesterday."
     
    Copeland said one firefighter was treated in hospital after suffering an injury caused by a medical condition, but he declined to give further details.
     
    Burns Bog is one of North America's largest peat bogs and flames can sink under the dry peat, where they burn out of sight.
     
    "That is the biggest challenge here," said Copeland. "We're hoping we can get a lot of the spots before it goes deep into the peat."
     
    He said aircraft including water bombers were on standby while helicopters helped fight the blaze. Several hot spots were put out overnight, he said.
     
    The fire was first reported late Sunday morning and Delta police have said it could take at least a week to extinguish.
     
    Copeland said the cause of the blaze was still under investigation.
     
    Highway 17 was expected to remain closed from Highway 99 to the Highway 91 connector for the rest of the day. Some businesses have been evacuated.
     
    Delta Mayor Lois Jackson said the fire is a "major emergency," and the community was under provincial emergency status. Crews had to scramble as it was a long weekend, she said.
     
    "But everybody's on hand. Everybody mustered. The people from the province, bless their hearts, they were here as fast as they could get here," she said. 
     
    "The faster you can get at a fire, the better, and the harder you can hit it, the better. I think all those things took place yesterday."
     
    Forty provincial firefighters, 20 from Delta Fire and 20 from Metro Vancouver were fighting the blaze.
     
    Naomi Yamamoto, B.C.'s minister of state for emergency preparedness, and Forests Minister Steve Thomson both called and "pledged everything they had," said Jackson.
     
    Jackson said Metro Vancouver was monitoring air quality as smoke had drifted into Vancouver, but conditions had improved since Sunday and it had not issued a general advisory.
     
    She said Delta would consult with Metro Vancouver's Burns Bog scientific advisory panel for guidance in the recovery of the 30-square-kilometre nature reserve.
     
    Jackson was also mayor in 2005, when a blaze in Burns Bog grew to more than two square kilometres and took more than a week to put out.
     
     
    "The last big fire, at this stage, was I think a lot bigger than this one," she said Monday. "We got this one fast, I think."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus
    Batalia, 19 at that time, was fatally shot at Surrey Simon Fraser University campus on September 28, 2011.

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings
     Convicted murderer Roy Fraser has lost an appeal of his first- and second-degree murder convictions for two slayings near Kamloops, B.C.

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    A judge is expected to rule this morning on whether to grant BC Hydro an injunction to remove people protesting the Site C dam project from a tent camp near Fort. St. John.

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics
    The decision in favour of Maria Shepherd, of Brampton, Ont., came after a short hearing at the urging of both Crown and defence.

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years
    Bill and Bertie Nickerson have been married 80 years and still live in the same brick house he had built for them following their marriage in 1935.

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study
    The board found that if the industry produces 30 million tonnes per year of LNG, Canada's economy would grow by $7.4 billion a year over 30 years.

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study