Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2015 11:13 AM
  • Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — About 1,600 people in southern British Columbia remain on evacuation alert as fire crews brace for winds to carry in trouble from wildfires in neighbouring Washington state.
 
Fire information officer Kevin Skrepnek says Grand Forks and Christina Lake residents could be asked to leave at a moment's notice if winds blow embers from the 195-square-kilometre Stickpin blaze across the border into B.C.
 
That fire is burning about five kilometres south of the border, where 48 firefighters, three officers and four pieces of heavy machinery from B.C. are helping to fight the fires.
 
The Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen has expanded its evacuation alert to now cover 285 homes or properties due to the potential impact of increased winds on the Testalinden Creek Wildfire.
 
Fire information officer Melissa Klassen says the six-hectare blaze in Myra-Bellevue Provincial Park south of Kelowna is contained but the 150-hectare Little White Mountain fire is not contained, although no structures are threatened.
 
Rain expected this weekend could help fight the wildfires, and Skrepnek says rainfall warnings may even cover areas such as Vancouver Island and the south coast. 
 
Skrepnek says the province has spent $244 million fighting 1,744 wildfires this year.

MORE National ARTICLES

Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says
TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP), the company planning to build the controversial cross-Canada oil pipeline, had been estimating it would cost $12 billion.

Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.
One man was killed in a collision between a tour bus carrying dozens of people and a car on a notorious stretch of Highway 1 south of Chase, in B.C.'s Interior, say police and firefighters.

One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental
Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie were working at Babine Forest Products in the community 225 kilometres west of Prince George, when the explosion occurred

Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer
City officials have dumped chicken manure on campsites, said David Wotherspoon, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society.

Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects
Police were called out to a site down a forest service road near Tumbler Ridge on July 15.

Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report

'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report
The review released Friday also found that Canadian Coast Guard staff were unsure of their roles and a faulty provincial alert system meant the city was not notified until 12 hours later.

'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report