Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fire sparked by RCMP trailer near Lytton, B.C., is being held and will be downgraded

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2025 09:44 AM
  • Fire sparked by RCMP trailer near Lytton, B.C., is being held and will be downgraded

A wildfire near Lytton, B.C., that ignited when a wheel fell off an RCMP trailer and prompted evacuations is now classified as "being held" and is no longer likely to spread.

The BC Wildfire Service says the change is due to "significant efforts" of firefighters with the help of favourable weather, which means the Izman Creek blaze will no longer be considered a wildfire of note.

Once the fire loses that classification — which designates a fire is generating particular interest, is highly visible or a threat to public safety — there will be no wildfires of note in B.C. 

The wildfire north of Lytton was sparked on July 1 by the RCMP vehicle failure in what Mounties have said was an unfortunate incident, a day after the fourth anniversary of a fire that destroyed most of the village.

The service says staff will remain on-site at the wildfire, which is listed as about 240 hectares in size, to continue mop-up and patrol to "ensure the area remains secure."

It is one of about 80 active fires across the province, about 20 per cent of which are classified as burning out of control.

The wildfire service says about 77 per cent of the fires are lightning-caused while about 20 per cent are human-caused and the rest are undetermined. 

The BC Wildfire Service also says in a post to Facebook that it has also deployed air tankers to help wildfire suppression efforts on a blaze in Washington state, south of Highway 3, between Christina Lake and Trail.

"At this time there is no threat to the Canada-US border," the post says.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout — BC Wildfire Service 

MORE National ARTICLES

Government failed to follow procurement, security rules with ArriveCan contractor

Government failed to follow procurement, security rules with ArriveCan contractor
Federal organizations failed to follow procurement and security rules when awarding contracts to the company behind the controversial ArriveCan app, the auditor general said Tuesday.

Government failed to follow procurement, security rules with ArriveCan contractor

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial
Defence lawyers for five former members of Canada's world junior hockey team are continuing to hammer at the credibility of the complainant as they make final submissions at the players' sexual assault trial.

Defence lawyers continue submissions at hockey players' sex assault trial

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers
Canada has joined the U.K., Norway, Australia and New Zealand in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers for "inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank."

Canada joins U.K., other nations in sanctioning two Israeli cabinet ministers

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic
The BC Wildfire Service is reporting that the largest of the province's major fires in the northeast has more than doubled in size in the past 24 hours.

B.C.'s biggest major wildfire doubles in size, but nearby highway reopens to traffic

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges
A Quebec Superior Court judge has stayed criminal charges against Montreal billionaire Robert Miller.

Judge says Montreal billionaire Robert Miller too sick for trial on sex charges

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation
Canada's new minister of artificial intelligence said Tuesday he'll put less emphasis on AI regulation and more on finding ways to harness the technology's economic benefits.

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation