Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2021 12:36 PM
  • Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

The number of wildfires burning in British Columbia has remained steady in the range of 225 as the number of properties on evacuation order and on alert dropped in the latest statistics released by the provincial government.

Emergency Management BC says 18 evacuation orders covered 3,537 properties as of Tuesday evening, a drop of 217 from the day before.

Residents of another 6,051 properties were told to be ready to leave on short notice as 68 evacuation alerts remained in place, down by 22 from Monday.

Updates posted online by the BC Wildfire Service show cooler temperatures and higher relative humidity have helped firefighting crews across much of the province.

The service says 15 fires of note were either highly visible or posed a potential threat to public safety, though it has reported little or no growth at several major fires in recent days, including the destructive Lytton Creek and White Rock Lake blazes.

The emergency operations centre for the central Okanagan says assessments of neighbourhoods directly affected by the 830-square-kilometre White Rock Lake fire along the western banks of Okanagan Lake should be complete by Thursday.

It says preliminary assessments have confirmed that 78 properties in the Estamont and Killiney Beach areas sustained significant damage, in addition to properties destroyed in the community of Monte Lake on the fire's opposite flank.

The centre says risk assessments will determine when evacuated residents can safely return home to their properties. Not all residents will be able to return home at the same time, it adds.

The B.C. government says 1,563 wildfires have scorched 8,653 square kilometres of land since the season began on April 1, eclipsing the 10-year average.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. maximum rent increase dropped for 2021

B.C. maximum rent increase dropped for 2021
The government says landlords can only increase rent once per year and must provide tenants with three months' notice.

B.C. maximum rent increase dropped for 2021

School districts will focus COVID-19 dollars

School districts will focus COVID-19 dollars
Education Minister Rob Fleming says school districts have different needs as they prepare to welcome back hundreds of thousands of students next week.

School districts will focus COVID-19 dollars

Liberals, Tories stop using wage subsidy

Liberals, Tories stop using wage subsidy
The program to subsidize worker pay by up to 75 per cent was meant to help employers keep workers on even if the COVID-19 pandemic had battered their revenues.

Liberals, Tories stop using wage subsidy

B.C. works overtime on COVID-19: Horgan

B.C. works overtime on COVID-19: Horgan
The premier's comments come as provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry is set to release new COVID-19 modelling data today ahead of schools resuming next week.

B.C. works overtime on COVID-19: Horgan

Pandemic pay to flow in October: premier's office

Pandemic pay to flow in October: premier's office
On Wednesday, the B.C. Government Employees' Union called on the government to either immediately distribute the stipend or provide a firm date when workers would receive it.

Pandemic pay to flow in October: premier's office

Toronto police need help in locating missing man Chamkaur Dhaliwal

Toronto police need help in locating missing man Chamkaur Dhaliwal
Chamkaur Dhaliwal, 49, was last seen on Tuesday, September 1, 2020, at approximately 10:30 a.m., in the Queen Street West and Ossington Avenue area.

Toronto police need help in locating missing man Chamkaur Dhaliwal