Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rain Forecast For B.C.'s Dry Southeast, But Officials Warn Against Complacency

The Canadian Press, 12 Sep, 2017 03:32 PM
    CASTLEGAR, B.C. — Evacuation orders are being lifted and highways reopened as the recovery phase begins following the most destructive wildfire season in British Columbia's recorded history.
     
    But B.C.'s agriculture minister warned that the fire season is not yet over, despite the progress being made on existing blazes and rain forecast to arrive later this week in the parched southeastern region.
     
    "Recovery, of course, is not going to be quick and it's not going to be easy," Lana Popham said during a conference call on Monday.
     
    More than 12,000 wildfires have consumed nearly 11,700 square kilometres of land across the province since April 1, forcing just shy of 50,000 people out of their homes at the peak of the disaster.
     
    The previous record for land destroyed by B.C. wildfires was set in 1958, when 8,950 square kilometres was incinerated.
     
    Thirteen evacuation orders remain in place, affecting about 4,200 residents, and another 10,400 people are still on standby to leave.
     
    "In many cases, recovery can be as difficult, or more difficult, than response," said Chris Duffy of Emergency Management BC.
     
    Regional emergency centres continue to operate across the province, but the provincial emergency program is looking at winding down some of those services as conditions continue to improve, Duffy added
     
     
    A spokesman for the Transportation Ministry said the last highway to be closed due to fires was reopened Monday afternoon and there were no remaining smoke advisories.
     
    RCMP spokeswoman Dawn Roberts said police officers would begin to transition back to their core policing duties as their help with checkpoints, roaming patrols and evacuation assistance is no longer needed.
     
    "This has been by far one of the largest and longest emergency support operations we have been part of for a very long time," Roberts said.
     
    More than 4,400 officers and civilian employees have been deployed on a rotational basis to the various fire zones across the province, she said. An additional 600 officers were deployed at the peak of the season.
     
    Kevin Skrepnek of the BC Wildfire Service warned that the fire situation, especially in the southeast, remains "very, very volatile," despite the welcome news that cooler, wetter weather is expected to arrive in the region starting Wednesday.
     
    "The last thing we want people to be doing is getting complacent," Skrepnek said.
     
    "We have had such a sustained hot and dry period that it is going to take a lot of rain to really undo just how dry a lot of the deeper layers of the forest floor got."
     
     
    He predicted the wildfire season will continue for several more weeks, if not longer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's Biggest Pulse Market In Doubt After India Rejects Extending Exemption

    CALGARY — Canada's top export market for its multi-billion-dollar pea and lentil crops industry is in doubt after India rejected extending a long-standing exemption on pest treatments.

    Canada's Biggest Pulse Market In Doubt After India Rejects Extending Exemption

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail
    PICTOU, N.S. — A Nova Scotia man convicted of biting off part of a fellow mourner’s nose in a drunken brawl at a wake has been sentenced to six months in jail.

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail

    Woman Forced To Remove Hijab By New York Police Department Cops, Files Case

      Rabab Musa, 34, alleged in the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit that she was "unlawfully arrested" last September as she left a Starbucks in Midtown.

    Woman Forced To Remove Hijab By New York Police Department Cops, Files Case

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack
    A chilling 911 call made by a panicked supervisor has been played in court at the trial of a man accused of murdering two co-workers and wounding others during an attack at an Edmonton grocery warehouse in 2014.

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack

    Toronto Polar Bear Juno Headed To Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo

    WINNIPEG — Like her two brothers before her, Juno the polar bear is going to be leaving the Toronto Zoo for an extended visit at Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo.

    Toronto Polar Bear Juno Headed To Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo

    Renowned Canadian-Born Architect Frank Gehry To Teach Online Architecture Course

    Renowned Canadian-Born Architect Frank Gehry To Teach Online Architecture Course
      The California-based Gehry will be teaching what is being billed as his first-ever online class this spring.

    Renowned Canadian-Born Architect Frank Gehry To Teach Online Architecture Course