Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Residents ask to return to fire-hit B.C. community

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Aug, 2021 02:53 PM
  • Residents ask to return to fire-hit B.C. community

A resident of a small British Columbia community devastated by wildfire says she and others want to return home to see what remains of their properties and businesses.

The community of Monte Lake, in B.C.'s central Interior, was hit by a wind-fanned wildfire last week that chased out residents and destroyed homes and businesses.

Victoria Cawkwell said she saw the fire approach her poultry farm and home.

"We were there for two hours watering everything down. We watched the fire come over the hill. It was an inferno, with 100-foot-high flames. We screamed for our lives, we screamed at our neighbours, hopped in our pickups and drove in the opposite direction hoping we were in time," she said in an interview.

Cawkwell, along with friends Lindsay Madsen and Ashlynn Kruesel, said their husbands have gone back to the community to fight the fires and to try to save what remains.

"It feels like a war zone. Some properties look like a bomb's been dropped. There's just a big hole in the ground," Cawkwell said.

Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth has faced criticism from locals after chastising those who stayed behind to protect their property only to need rescuing by crews from the BC Wildfire Service.

Cawkwell said she wanted to offer Farnworth and Premier John Horgan a chance to come to her home for coffee and look out to see the devastation left by the wildfire.

"I want them to look out my window and look at a desolate, bare, blackened, horrible nightmare that I will have to live for the rest of my life," she said. "We have nothing."

Farnworth did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Cawkwell said the community has also been hurt by the inaction of BC Wildfire Service management in working to better protect or save properties.

"If they're not going to protect our homes, we want to go home. We want to go home now and do what we can," she said.

The same massive fire that destroyed Monte Lake continues to burn between Kamloops and Okanagan Lake.

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District downgraded an evacuation order to an alert late Monday for about 400 properties threatened by fire.

Properties from the outskirts of Kamloops east to Chase are affected by the downgrade, while two other local governments replaced evacuation orders with alerts in and around the communities of Falkland and Fintry.

The BC Wildfire Service says the White Rock Lake fire remains out of control and evacuation orders continue for the communities of Monte Lake and Westwold.

The wildfire service reports five new fire starts over the last two days, dropping the total number of wildfires to about 260. But there's concern another hot spell due to arrive Wednesday will ramp up the fire danger.

Environment Canada has issued special weather statements covering inland sections of the north and central coasts, parts of Vancouver Island, the inner south coast and southern Interior, calling for heat in the mid- to high-30s, with little overnight relief until the weekend.

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP say Winnipeg man faces fine for not wearing mask on airline flight

RCMP say Winnipeg man faces fine for not wearing mask on airline flight
Manitoba RCMP say they've been called for a second time this month because an airline passengers was not wearing a mask while flying.

RCMP say Winnipeg man faces fine for not wearing mask on airline flight

Police say death of Chinese national in Surrey, B.C., not random, but few clues

Police say death of Chinese national in Surrey, B.C., not random, but few clues
Homicide detectives in Metro Vancouver are appealing for information as they investigate the murder of a 41-year-old woman who died in hospital on June 17.

Police say death of Chinese national in Surrey, B.C., not random, but few clues

B.C. allows more openings, but 'we are not leaving COVID-19 behind,' Horgan

B.C. allows more openings, but 'we are not leaving COVID-19 behind,' Horgan
British Columbia is further easing restrictions that are in place because of COVID-19, allowing hotels, motels, spas, resorts, hostels and RV parks to resume operating.

B.C. allows more openings, but 'we are not leaving COVID-19 behind,' Horgan

Search underway in B.C. backcountry for Alberta man missing since November

Search underway in B.C. backcountry for Alberta man missing since November
A search is underway in a remote and mountainous area in British Columbia where the burned out vehicle of a missing Alberta man was found by hikers last November.

Search underway in B.C. backcountry for Alberta man missing since November

Asylum seekers continue to cross Canada-U.S. border despite shutdown

Asylum seekers continue to cross Canada-U.S. border despite shutdown
New statistics show 21 people were apprehended by the RCMP crossing into Canada from the U.S. in May, despite the shutdown of the border.

Asylum seekers continue to cross Canada-U.S. border despite shutdown

Plans for 'Atlantic bubble' on July 3 as cases of COVID-19 stabilize

Plans for 'Atlantic bubble' on July 3 as cases of COVID-19 stabilize
The four Atlantic provinces have announced plans to ease interprovincial travel restrictions, creating a so-called "bubble" as the region has reported relatively few new COVID-19 infections in recent weeks.

Plans for 'Atlantic bubble' on July 3 as cases of COVID-19 stabilize