Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Emergency Declared In Port Hardy As Dozens Of Wildfires Burn Across B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2015 01:32 PM
    PORT HARDY, B.C. — Dozens of wildfires burning across British Columbia are forcing residents from their homes, with one small Vancouver Island district declaring a state of emergency.
     
    Port Hardy Mayor Hank Bood said a state of emergency was issued on Saturday morning after an 16-hectare fire forced the evacuation of about 100 residences.
     
    "We're hopeful, but it's still a very volatile situation," he said.
     
    Bood said the fire is extremely unusual for Port Hardy, as it typically has a wet climate but has not had rain in two months.
     
    He warned residents to obey the campfire ban that the B.C. government has issued for the entire province, apart from a two-kilometre strip on Vancouver Island.
     
    "People in the north island need to understand that we are in a very unusual place," he said. "We're not fooling around anymore."
     
    Declaring a state of emergency will allow the district to bill the province for expenses it incurs during the blaze, he added.
     
    The fire is believed to be human-caused. It began Friday night on the Tsulaquat River, a heavily timbered area about 1.5 kilometres west of Port Hardy.
     
    Donna MacPherson of the B.C. Wildfire Service said when the fire started, strong winds were blowing sparks into the air, creating a small spot fire in the area about 1 hectare in size.
     
    She said retardant drops completed by air tankers Friday night helped contain the main blaze. On Saturday, crews were working on the edges of the fire and helicopters were dumping large amounts of ocean water on the area.
     
    The B.C. Wildfire Service was bringing in more resources to fight the blaze on Saturday afternoon. 
     
     
    MacPherson said temperatures are 12 to 18 degrees hotter than they normally are this time of year. 
     
    "We're asking anybody, if you see a tree, stop and think about what you're doing," she said. "Think about whatever it is you're doing that might start a forest fire. We don't need any more."
     
    More than 150 wildfires are burning in B.C., including an 80-hectare blaze in the Okanagan that has forced the evacuation of 142 Kelowna homes.
     
    An additional 40 firefighters and support staff were brought in to battle the blaze on Saturday, bringing the total number of crew members to more than 60.
     
    Highway 33 was open to single-lane alternating traffic through the fire zone but the speed limit was reduced. RCMP set up road blocks at Goudie Road and Cardinal Creek Road to prevent access to the evacuated area.
     
    The B.C. Wildfire Service also warned that smoke from two lightning-caused wildfires could drift into the communities of Bella Coola, Houston, Burns Lake, Southside and Francois Lake.
     
    The Kapella River fire had burned about 600 to 1,000 hectares about 77 kilometres northwest of Bella Coola, while the Europa Lake fire had burned about 10 hectares about 86 kilometres southeast of Kitimat.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Case Dismissed Against Woman Charged In Death Of Lobster Fisherman Phillip Boudreau

    Carla Samson was facing a charge of accessory after the fact in the death of Phillip Boudreau, whose body was never found after he disappeared on June 1, 2013.

    Case Dismissed Against Woman Charged In Death Of Lobster Fisherman Phillip Boudreau

    Ontario Replacing Peeling Signs On Highway Lanes To Be Used During Pan Am

    Ontario Replacing Peeling Signs On Highway Lanes To Be Used During Pan Am
    TORONTO — Ontario's government says work will get underway as soon as possible to replace peeling signs marking temporary high-occupancy vehicle lanes in the Toronto region that will be used for the Pan Am Games.

    Ontario Replacing Peeling Signs On Highway Lanes To Be Used During Pan Am

    Canadian Pacific Challenging Responsibility In Lac-megantic Disaster In Court

    Canadian Pacific Challenging Responsibility In Lac-megantic Disaster In Court
    SHERBROOKE, Que. — A judge has begun hearing arguments that could determine the fate of more than $431 million destined for victims and creditors of the 2013 train disaster in Lac-Megantic, Que.

    Canadian Pacific Challenging Responsibility In Lac-megantic Disaster In Court

    Vancouver Residents Asked To Avoid Seawall After Apparent Diesel Spill In False Creek

    Vancouver Residents Asked To Avoid Seawall After Apparent Diesel Spill In False Creek
    Jeff Brady with the Canadian Coast Guard says hundreds of metres of containment booms have been set up off Granville Island.

    Vancouver Residents Asked To Avoid Seawall After Apparent Diesel Spill In False Creek

    RCMP Investigate Second Weekend Shooting In Surrey That Put Two More In Hospital

    RCMP Investigate Second Weekend Shooting In Surrey That Put Two More In Hospital
    RCMP say they responded to reports of gunfire between two vehicles (in the 18600 block of Highway 10) around 10 p.m. on Saturday.

    RCMP Investigate Second Weekend Shooting In Surrey That Put Two More In Hospital

    Vancouver Police Warn Of Downtown Robberies Against Seniors, No Charges Laid

    Vancouver Police Warn Of Downtown Robberies Against Seniors, No Charges Laid
    Officers responded early Thursday and Friday mornings after a woman allegedly entered two unlocked suites in an apartment building (near the intersection of Seymour and Davie streets) and robbed the occupants.

    Vancouver Police Warn Of Downtown Robberies Against Seniors, No Charges Laid