Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Half-Dozen Fires Burn Together To Create One Huge Blaze: BC Wildfire Service

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2017 12:34 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Several large wildfires have combined into what the BC Wildfire Service says is the largest blaze burning in the province.
     
    The wildfire service says at least six fires in an area west of Quesnel in central B.C. have burned together to create a single fire that is about 4,700 square kilometres in size.
     
    Until Sunday, the wildfire service said the largest fire covered 2,270-square kilometres and was burning about 60 kilometres west of Williams Lake.
     
    Fire officials reported 137 blazes across the province on Sunday and the wildfire service website shows seven new fires started in a 24-hour period.
     
    Four are believed to be linked to lightning but the website says three may have been caused by human activity.
     
     
    Several evacuation orders northwest of Kamloops were downgraded to alerts over the weekend, allowing residents around Loon and Green lakes to return home,
     
    Members of the Skeetchestn Indian Band west of Kamloops were cleared to return as of noon on Monday. 
     
     
    EVACUATION ORDER LIFTED AFTER B.C. WILDFIRE DESTROYS DOZENS OF HOMES
     
     
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — Hundreds of people are being allowed to return to Loon Lake, B.C., more than a month after flames forced them from their homes and destroyed dozens of buildings in the community.
     
    The Thompson-Nicola Regional District lifted an evacuation order for 309 properties in the area, but an alert remains in place, warning residents that they may need to leave again on a moment's notice.
     
     
    The evacuation order was issued in mid July when a fire threatened the community, located about 130 kilometres northwest of Kamloops in B.C.'s Interior.
     
    About 40 structures were destroyed by the flames, including vacation properties and permanent homes, said Megan Gregory, an information officer with the regional district.
     
    In late July, local authorities released footage taken by a drone flying over an area devastated by the flames. The video shows the crumpled remains of homes, the metal skeletons of vehicles, piles of ash and blackened trees.
     
    "The landscape, from pictures people have been sharing, has significantly changed," Gregory said.
     
    A meeting was held Sunday morning to give returning residents information on what they can expect to see and how to deal with some of the things they may encounter, including spoiled food and fridges that must be disposed of.
     
     
    Overall, people are excited to return, Gregory said.
     
    "From their interactions online and being part of some of their Facebook chats, they're a great group of people and they're so happy to be going home."
     
    A lifted evacuation order is great news, but there are things residents need to remember as go home, said Chris Duffy with Emergency Management BC.
     
    "We want to remind people as they're returning to their communities to be patient and respect the direction of first responders, local authorities, fire crews and the RCMP that are working in and around their community to keep them safe," he said.
     
    About 3,800 people around the province remain displaced by the flames and another 9,700 are on evacuation alert.
     
    In addition to the evacuation alert in Loon Lake, an area restriction remains in place, which prohibits the public from entering the vicinity.
     
    Kevin Skrepnek, chief information officer for the BC Wildfire Service, said the ban is in place because fire crews are active in the area and hazards like damaged trees could remain in the fire's wake.
     
    "Loon Lake itself is in the heart of where the fire did burn," Skrepnek said.
     
    It was one of 137 fires still burning in B.C. Sunday, he added, but the flames are moving away from Loon Lake.
     
    "It's seldom an area will burn twice. It depends on how thoroughly it burned through that area, but generally, once a fire has gone through, it won't go back," Skrepnek said.
     
    More than 1,000 fires have burned across B.C. since April 1, scorching about 9,000 square kilometres.
     
    Scattered showers were seen across parts of the province over the weekend, but Skrepnek said people shouldn't get complacent because of the rain.
     
    "By no means, has this rain done much to really alleviate our situation right now," he said.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Success Rates: Why Some Refugee Claimants May Have Better Odds In Canada

    Success Rates: Why Some Refugee Claimants May Have Better Odds In Canada
    WINNIPEG — Bundled against bone-chilling cold, asylum-seekers hoping to gain refugee status in Canada have been trudging through ditches and fields along the border with the United States.

    Success Rates: Why Some Refugee Claimants May Have Better Odds In Canada

    Any Appeal Of N.S. Taxi Driver Acquittal To Be Based On Law, Not Protests: Crown

    Any Appeal Of N.S. Taxi Driver Acquittal To Be Based On Law, Not Protests: Crown
    HALIFAX — A spokeswoman for Nova Scotia's prosecutors says any appeal of the acquittal of a Halifax cabbie charged with sexual assault will be on the basis of legal errors, not public protests.

    Any Appeal Of N.S. Taxi Driver Acquittal To Be Based On Law, Not Protests: Crown

    Ottawa Constable Facing Manslaughter Charge In 2016 Death Of Somali Canadian Man

    Ottawa Constable Facing Manslaughter Charge In 2016 Death Of Somali Canadian Man
    OTTAWA — An Ottawa police constable is facing criminal charges in the death of a Somali-Canadian man during a confrontation last summer with police.

    Ottawa Constable Facing Manslaughter Charge In 2016 Death Of Somali Canadian Man

    RCMP Urges Patience As It Probes Malicious Emails At University Of Moncton

    RCMP Urges Patience As It Probes Malicious Emails At University Of Moncton
    MONCTON, N.B. — The RCMP says it is "working diligently" to ensure all investigative avenues are explored as it tries to determine who is sending malicious emails targeting a female student at the University of Moncton.

    RCMP Urges Patience As It Probes Malicious Emails At University Of Moncton

    Harjit Sajjan, Chrystia Freeland Announce Canada To Extend Ukraine Training Mission To 2019

    Harjit Sajjan, Chrystia Freeland Announce Canada To Extend Ukraine Training Mission To 2019
    The mission, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau toured during a visit to the country in July, had been set to expire at the end of March.

    Harjit Sajjan, Chrystia Freeland Announce Canada To Extend Ukraine Training Mission To 2019

    RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson Says He Plans To Leave His Post By Summer

    RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson Says He Plans To Leave His Post By Summer
    In a message to the force on Monday, RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson said he will leave at the end of June to focus on his family more after spending 32 years with the force, the last five as commissioner.

    RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson Says He Plans To Leave His Post By Summer