The Province

Officials plan B.C. wildfire evacuation centre closure, even as fires still rage

- — The Canadian Press

KAMLOOPS — Social services officials in British Columbia’s southern Interior hope at least one large centre for wildfire evacuees can be closed this weekend, despite warnings that the wildfire season in the province isn’t over.

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District plans to begin winding down services that include emergency accommodat­ion at a sports arena in Kamloops, although spokeswoma­n Debbie Sell said those plans would change if wildfires flare.

Sell said some evacuees remain in Kamloops and still need assistance, but most of the hundreds of families chased off their properties by fire in July and August are now home.

The blaze that broke out in early July near Ashcroft, southwest of Kamloops, was responsibl­e for many of those evacuation­s and has now burned nearly 2,000 square kilometres.

The wildfire service says the blaze is just 50 per cent contained and recently prompted a new round of evacuation­s after crossing into the Cariboo Regional District, but Sell says affected residents did not seek help in Kamloops.

“A lot of the evacuation orders that have been issued recently have been in the Cariboo Regional District and those residents have gone to 100 Mile House for services,” she said.

New Brunswick has announced it is sending another 16 firefighte­rs to B.C.

Five are coming from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador to help with the fight that has already cost the B.C. government almost half a billion dollars.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Cots are set up for evacuees from a summer of wildfires at the Sandman Centre in Kamloops, in July.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Cots are set up for evacuees from a summer of wildfires at the Sandman Centre in Kamloops, in July.

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