Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lightning, Dry Temperatures Keep B.C. Fire Crews Busy Fighting New Blazes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2015 10:52 AM
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Firefighters continue to battle a growing wildfire southwest of Prince George, B.C., but cooler weather earlier this week is expected to keep it from spreading while lightning poses a continuing threat.
     
    However, fire information officer Kevin Skrepnek said the Little Bobtail Lake fire grew by 40 per cent to 250 square kilometres over the weekend.
     
    "It's unusual to see a fire of this size so early in the season," Skrepnek said. "Otherwise, it's been a pretty typical year in terms of number of fires we've seen and the area burned."
     
    Eighty people remain out of their homes in the Prince George area, while residents in 830 properties in the regional districts of Fraser-Fort George the Bulkley-Nichako are on evacuation alert.
     
    While the Little Bobtail fire is believed to be caused by humans, lightning fuelled a cluster of seven fires in the central Cariboo region on the long weekend, including a 30,000 square-metre blaze near Anahim Lake. 
     
    All the new fires are either extinguished or under control.
     
    About 25 lightning-caused fires have cropped up across the province so far this season, among the 186 wildfires crews have fought.
     
    Around 270 square kilometres have burned so far, Skrepnek said, including the area consumed by the Little Bobtail fire.
     
    Last year, the province spent $298 million fighting wildfires, more than four times the yearly allocation of $63 million.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Siblings Allege Funeral Home Picked Up Mom's Body Without Consent From St. Paul’s Hospit

    Vancouver Siblings Allege Funeral Home Picked Up Mom's Body Without Consent From St. Paul’s Hospit
    VANCOUVER — A brother and sister are taking a B.C. hospital and funeral home to court over allegations that their 95-year-old mother's body was transferred without their consent and had to be tracked down.

    Vancouver Siblings Allege Funeral Home Picked Up Mom's Body Without Consent From St. Paul’s Hospit

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack
    John Nuttall and Amanda Korody had spent months in the spring of 2013 talking through the details of their plot with an undercover RCMP officer who they believed was a sympathetic Arab businessmen.

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists
    Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson apologized for his fowl tone after he made chicken clucking noises during question period.

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne strongly defended the province's revised sex-education curriculum Tuesday as she faced Opposition criticism that was branded as "homophobic."

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier
    KILLEEN, Texas — A Canadian woman was among three people killed in Texas by a soldier, who shot himself in what appears to have been a domestic dispute, police said Tuesday.

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit
    OTTAWA — New research by National Defence shows that soldiers with mental health conditions, especially those with Afghan war illnesses, are far more likely to be declared unfit for military service and almost 70 per cent of them can expect to be mustered out within 10 years of deployment.

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit