The Province

FIRE THREAT GROWS

14,000 evacuated across B.C., another 10,000 on high alert in Williams Lake First Nation leaders vow to stay and fight to save their homes Shaken evacuees comforted in Kamloops, Prince George

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Angie Thorne hugs her granddaugh­ter as she looks for the first time at the blackened pit where her Ashcroft home of 21 years had stood just days earlier.

Thorne and her husband escaped with their camper trailer Friday before their home at the Ashcroft Indian Reserve burned to the ground.

They returned Sunday to see what remained after a large wildfire engulfed their community, west of Kamloops.

“We made many memories here,” Thorne said, falling silent as tears streamed from behind her sunglasses.

She held up a charred metal sign that used to hang near her front door that read: “Welcome to our home.”

“It all seems like my material stuff, but ... everything that was in this home, we worked hard all our lives for,” she said. “We didn't have the newest or best stuff, but it was ours. It was our family's.”

Most of the homes on the reserve were destroyed by the Ashcroft Reserve wildfire, which was burning more than 60 square kilometres Monday — one of 218 wildfires that have lit the province ablaze and have forced the evacuation of 14,000 people.

With hot, dry conditions and wind in the forecast, officials braced for the worst.

A city-wide evacuation alert was issued Monday evening for Williams Lake. Its residents, numbering more than 10,000, have to be ready to leave at a moment's notice in case strong winds forecast for Wednesday push wildfires burning in the Hanceville area — about 60 kilometres southwest of Williams Lake — toward the city.

The Hanceville fires, estimated at 10,000 hectares, may seem far away, but depending on the winds, it could spread to Williams Lake rapidly, said officials.

“This is precaution­ary,” said Milo MacDonald, chief administra­tive officer for Williams Lake. “Some might believe we are erring on the side of being overly cautious, but we are erring on the side of preparing people.”

The Cariboo Regional District also issued an evacuation alert for people living on the fringes of Williams Lake. The town is already dealing with a “complex” of fires burning nearby — made up of the Wildwood fire near the airport and the fire at 150 Mile House — scorching about 10,000 hectares.

As many as 25,000 in the city of Williams Lake and its surroundin­g areas are affected by the fires with up to 13,000 covered by Monday's evacuation alerts.

“Winds and weather are not going to be in our favour starting Wednesday,” said Cariboo Regional District's Al Richmond.

Also on Monday, 49 households north of Princeton were evacuated, bringing the total number of evacuated homes in the area to 350.

Kevin Skrepnek, B.C.'s chief fire informatio­n officer, said 29 new fires were ignited Sunday, a lower figure compared to previous days due to less lightning activity.

A dramatic wind shift in the 5,000-hectare Gustafsen wildfire caused the evacuation of the entire town of 100 Mile House Sunday night (1,950 residents).

Mayor Mitch Campsall hasn't slept in two nights. “The evacuation was a complete shock, we were not expecting it,” he said.

“It took the search and rescue team about 45 minutes to deliver the (evacuation) letters. Within an hour and a half everybody was out of town . ... We had no hassles, nothing. It was absolute textbook. Flawless. It couldn't have gone any better.”

No houses, businesses or infrastruc­ture have been lost in 100 Mile House.

On Monday morning, authoritie­s took the rare step of issuing a provincewi­de campfire ban with the exception of Haida Gwaii and a narrow strip of land on the west side of Vancouver Island.

"We are just seeing such a high hazard across the province right now that this was necessary,” said Skrepnek during a daily media briefing.

About 300 firefighte­rs from Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Ontario and New Brunswick began arriving Monday to reinforce the 1,000 provincial firefighte­rs battling the blazes and help spell off some of the exhausted crews.

“This is only 10 days into July and there is potential that we could see this continue,” Skrepnek said. “Our people need to pace themselves and that plays into why we are bringing in out-of-province crews and contract crews.”

“It all seems like my material stuff, but ... everything that was in this home, we worked hard all our lives for.” — Angie Thorne

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said Alberta understand­s how traumatic wildfires can be for communitie­s after residents of Fort McMurray were forced to flee a massive wildfire last year.

“We're all part of the same country and we know ourselves that these can be very, very trying times and we have a lot of expertise here in Alberta,” Notley said Monday.

Alberta has sent about 100 firefighte­rs and 60 other support staff to B.C., while Saskatchew­an is sending 30 firefighte­rs, two tankers and one airplane.

Back at the Ashcroft Reserve, surrounded by the devastatio­n of a raging wildfire, members of the Thorne family expressed relief they were safe.

“My granddaugh­ter said on the way here, we were looking at the devastatio­n coming down the valley, and she said all that matters is that we're all safe,” she added. “Coming from an eight-year-old, we can learn from that.”

The family's seven-month-old cat had survived the inferno, her blackened whiskers singed and curled from the heat.

“Bigger and better, eh babe?” Thorne said to her husband, surveying the damage.

He squeezed her shoulder: “We'll rebuild.” — The Canadian Press with files from

Patrick Johnston and Denise Ryan

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A wildfire burns on a mountain near Cache Creek early Monday. Spreading wildfires are putting more B.C. communitie­s at risk.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS A wildfire burns on a mountain near Cache Creek early Monday. Spreading wildfires are putting more B.C. communitie­s at risk.
 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nevaeh Porter, 8, is comforted by her grandmothe­r Angie Thorne on Sunday as they view the remains of their home on the Ashcroft First Nation after it was destroyed by wildfire.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Nevaeh Porter, 8, is comforted by her grandmothe­r Angie Thorne on Sunday as they view the remains of their home on the Ashcroft First Nation after it was destroyed by wildfire.

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