Times Colonist

Kindness of Kamloops a beacon for fire evacuees

- KAMLOOPS JACK KNOX

Give this to the people of Kamloops: They know how to throw an Apocalypse. When the wildfires hit and the evacuees poured in — thousands of them from such places as Ashcroft, Cache Creek, Williams Lake and 100 Mile House — the city responded as though it were auditionin­g for a Disney movie.

Residents opened their wallets. They opened their homes. They opened their hearts (and lungs, which then filled with smoke).

Typical was the Facebook post from the guy who not only volunteere­d to use his pickup truck to haul trailers from the fire zone, but offered a vacant basement suite “with enough room that a family of four could squeeze in without wanting to murder each other (any more than usual).”

Somebody else offered 30 acres of pasture land and 150 bales of hay. A group of mostly trucking-related Kamloops businesses threw a tailgate party that raised $300,000. Evacuees were offered free pet food, bus passes, denture repair, yoga classes, art gallery visits, gym access and kids’ camps. Hotels halved their room rates at the busiest time of year. The Sikh community provided a nightly dinner for evacuees. So did the casino.

When the combinatio­n of thick smoke (on some days Mount Peter and Mount Paul were barely visible across the South Thompson River) and higher priorities led to the cancellati­on of Sunday’s marathon, organizers put on a free breakfast for evacuees instead.

Pop-up campground­s sprouted all over town, from the Tk’emlupss Powwow grounds to neighbourh­ood parks. Grocery store shoppers donated loyalty program points to the evacuees. The city waived parking fees in designated lots.

And the people! What CFJC television called “a group of moms collecting donations on Facebook” snowballed into a giant clearing house for food, clothing and hygiene items. I met nurses and care aides who went straight from their paid jobs to volunteer shifts with the evacuees. I know a woman who stayed up all night greeting elderly and infirm 100 Mile House evacuees who Dunkirked into town by whatever means possible — private car, aging school bus. Her husband has been spending his mornings flipping pancakes in a Sally Ann mobile kitchen.

Some of those responding to the wildfires have done so dramatical­ly. Former Sidney/North Saanich Mountie (and Tour de Rock rider) Ryan Grottolo, now posted to Chilliwack, made the news by jumping on an ornery ranch horse and riding it (bareback, no less) to safety as the flames advanced near Williams Lake.

Others are more low-key. Each day, a small army of dog-walkers trundles around Kamloops’ Riverside Park (where dogs are usually banned) with some of the 800 animals housed at an emergency pet shelter. The CBC had a story about volunteers filling a hot water bottle with Starbucks coffee to warm and revive a neardeath reptile. Everyone, it seems, wanted to help after the fires hit.

So imagine my dismay when, finding myself in Kamloops with time to kill, I volunteere­d to pitch in, only to be pitched out. “We don’t need you,” I was told. Seems they had all the volunteers they needed, or at least all the volunteers whose skills were limited to A) typing slowly and B) napping.

It’s a bit humbling to go flying to the rescue, only to discover that you are not so much Superman as superfluou­s. It’s disconcert­ing to realize you are not as indispensa­ble as you imagine, that when the next Great Flood arrives and they’re choosing who gets to board the ark, you’ll be left treading water with the performanc­e artists and search engine optimizati­on specialist­s, watching the farmers and physicians sail away.

But I digress. This summer’s wildfires have been devastatin­g but, as was the case with Fort McMurray, the response has been impressive. Too often we leave it to government to solve every problem. In Kamloops, it felt like everyone — government­s, businesses, institutio­ns, individual­s — decided to step up.

KAMLOOPS — Thousands of residents from Williams Lake who hoped to be heading home soon after being displaced by wildfires nearly two weeks ago will have to be patient a while longer.

Hot, dry weather in the foreseeabl­e future for southern parts of the province prompted officials to say Wednesday that the wildfire crisis will likely get worse through the summer.

Chief fire informatio­n officer Kevin Skrepnek said crews are still monitoring the situation around Williams Lake but because of weather conditions, the B.C. Wildfire Service is likely to recommend a delay in lifting the evacuation order.

“We’re definitely going to want to wait and see in terms of what these fires are going to do, how they’re going to react to this weather,” he said.

Skrepnek added that city staff in Williams Lake were expected to fly over the fires Wednesday as they worked to decide when to lift the order, and Cariboo Regional District Chairman Al Richmond said preparatio­ns for residents to return are ongoing.

The current level of dryness in the forests is weeks ahead of where it should be and more fires are expected to start in the days ahead, Skrepnek said.

Crews are “gearing up” as lightning and little to no precipitat­ion creates “ideal conditions for fires to start and fires to spread quite quickly,” he said.

There are still about 19,100 people displaced, and Robert Turner of Emergency Management B.C. said more support is coming for Kamloops and Prince George, the communitie­s that have helped most of those residents forced out of their homes.

“The commitment and dedication of these people has seen some truly heroic efforts and I think we’re finding now with the situation going on for so long that a lot of them are getting tired,” Turner said, adding the relentless fire conditions are also taking a toll on fire crews and volunteers.

He said the province is working with local government­s to ensure any additional support needed, including human resources, will be made available as people remain out of their homes.

For the first time in days, a new evacuation order was issued by the Thompson-Nicola Regional District late Tuesday night for residents on a handful of properties northeast of Clinton, about 350 kilometres north of Vancouver.

The 615-square-kilometre wildfire has been threatenin­g the region for nearly three weeks and already destroyed dozens of homes from Ashcroft north to Loon Lake, east of Clinton.

RCMP confirmed Wednesday that a wildfire that raced through a Lake Country neighbourh­ood in the Okanagan and destroyed eight homes was arson.

Cpl. Dan Moskaluk said police want to speak with a group of adults who were using the recreation­al area near where the fire started on July 15 and are also encouragin­g anyone with photos or video footage to contact police.

He said several residents suffered substantia­l financial and emotional damage, and it was fortunate that no one was injured or killed by the fast-moving flames.

Fires have charred about 3,790 square kilometres of timber, bush and grassland in B.C., since April 1, and crews are continuing to try to bring more than 150 wildfires under control.

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 ??  ?? A wildfire burns behind a house on the Ashcroft First Nation this month. The 615-square-kilometre fire has destroyed dozens of homes from Ashcroft north to Loon Lake.
A wildfire burns behind a house on the Ashcroft First Nation this month. The 615-square-kilometre fire has destroyed dozens of homes from Ashcroft north to Loon Lake.

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