Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vehicle fire spreads, prompts evacuation alert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2022 02:16 PM
  • Vehicle fire spreads, prompts evacuation alert

Residents of about a dozen properties along a stretch of Highway 3 in British Columbia's southern Interior are being asked to get ready to evacuate at a moment's notice after a vehicle fire quickly spread to nearby grasses and trees.

The BC Wildfire Service website shows the fire has so far charred about 30 hectares, under half a kilometre square, along the route south of Cawston.

The evacuation alert issued by the Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen covers properties along the highway and Sumac Road, west of Richter Mountain.

Severe thunderstorms have been rolling through B.C.'s Interior, delivering hundreds of lightning strikes to areas already ranked at a high to extreme risk for wildfires.

The wildfire service website shows 45 new fires have been recorded in the last two days, including one suspected lightning-caused blaze near Monte Lake, the same area where a massive wildfire destroyed homes last year.

The new fires remain small, but more lightning is in the forecast for areas of southern and southeastern B.C., such as Penticton, where a 67-square-kilometre wildfire has forced evacuation orders and alerts.

The wildfire service has warned that gusty winds linked to thunderstorms can increase fire behaviour, but it says containment lines are stable on the southern and eastern flanks of the fire nearest to the communities of Keremeos and Olalla.

At the height of Thursday's thunderstorms, Environment Canada says Kamloops recorded a wind gust of 82 kilometres per hour, while gusts in Merritt reached nearly 60 kilometres per hour and the city was drenched by more than 23 millimetres of rain, causing some localized flooding.

Thunderstorms on Wednesday also brought heavy rain to areas around Lytton, which was damaged by wildfires last year, causing mudslides that have covered the Trans-Canada Highway, closing the route between Lytton and Spences Bridge.

Severe thunderstorm watches remain in place for much of the southeastern Interior, from the Similkameen and Okanagan regions to the East Kootenays.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberal budget will pass with NDP support

Liberal budget will pass with NDP support
Amita Kuttner said the plan to get to net-zero is not enough to meet Canada's emissions reduction targets and the Greens wanted the budget to centre on climate change in every policy area.    

Liberal budget will pass with NDP support

Unemployment rate falls to record low in March

Unemployment rate falls to record low in March
Statistics Canada also says the unemployment rate would have been 7.2 per cent had it included in calculations people who wanted a job but did not look for one, falling to pre-pandemic levels for the first time.

Unemployment rate falls to record low in March

Man dies in inbounds avalanche in Whistler, B.C.

Man dies in inbounds avalanche in Whistler, B.C.
Police said the 34-year-old Whistler man was pronounced dead at the scene and an investigation involving Whistler Blackcomb, the RCMP and the B.C. Coroners Service is underway.

Man dies in inbounds avalanche in Whistler, B.C.

End of vaccine card in B.C. too soon: doctor

End of vaccine card in B.C. too soon: doctor
People with two doses of a vaccine should no longer be considered "fully vaccinated" when that leaves others vulnerable to reinfection with COVID-19, as seen in jurisdictions like England, she said.

End of vaccine card in B.C. too soon: doctor

Budget 2022: $500M in new military aid to Ukraine

Budget 2022: $500M in new military aid to Ukraine
The promised new aid is contained in the Liberal government’s latest federal budget plan, which paints a gloomy picture for Canada’s economy should the war in Ukraine drag on, including even higher fuel prices and supply-chain problems.

Budget 2022: $500M in new military aid to Ukraine

Budget 2022: Housing supply gets $10B boost

Budget 2022: Housing supply gets $10B boost
Freeland has committed to doubling the number of homes built each year over the next decade to about 400,000 to help meet the 3.5 million homes the government estimates are needed by 2031, but the plans rely heavily on co-operation with other levels of government and the private sector.

Budget 2022: Housing supply gets $10B boost