Toronto Star

Heat persists in B.C. town as evacuation alerts lifted

Coming weather system could cause ‘dangerous situation’ in southern region

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

100 MILE HOUSE, B.C.— An area of British Columbia’s South Cariboo region is no longer under an evacuation alert as the wildfire threat subsides, but officials fear high temperatur­es and a chance for lightning could bring an uptick in fire activity next week.

The Cariboo Regional District announced Saturday that the evacuation alert for 100 Mile House and surroundin­g communitie­s was rescinded.

Officials warn that an alert or order forcing people from their homes yet again is still a possibilit­y.

Environmen­t Canada forecasts rising temperatur­es up to and above 30 C for the southern Interior in the coming week, and the BC Wildfire Service has said the forests are much drier than normal.

Chief fire informatio­n officer Kevin Skrepnek said there is no rain in the foreseeabl­e future for the southern parts of the province and there’s a chance a subtropic weather system could bring lightning later in the week.

“To have that lightning arrive on Thursday, which is what the forecast is indicating right now, could make for a very dangerous situation out there in terms of new fires starting,” he said.

Chris Duffy with Emergency Man- agement BC said that roughly 3,700 people remain displaced by the remaining 18 evacuation orders in the province, down significan­tly from the tens of thousands that were forced from their homes earlier this month.

Crews are still responding to the 148 fires burning across the province, an effort Skrepnek said has become more challengin­g in some areas with people returning home.

“We’ve had multiple incidents with folks accessing areas where we’re in the midst of fighting fire,” he said.

Issues include people using offroad vehicles in areas where crews are working and some people are boating on lakes that helicopter­s and water skimming aircraft must access.

“I don’t think they’re intentiona­lly trying to impede operations and I think what it could be in many situations is just ignorance of how large these fires are and how expansive our operations have become,” he said, adding some fires are more than 1,000 square kilometres in size.

Skrepnek said the wildfire service has the authority to close off areas near fire sites if these problems persist. Incidents of vandalism and stolen equipment, such as water pumps and hoses, have also been an issue, and Skrepnek said the wildfire service is working with RCMP to resolve the problem.

The province has seen 810 fires this season, costing the wildfire service $166.7 million since April 1.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Roughly 3,700 people remain displaced by the remaining 18 evacuation orders in the province, emergency officials say.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Roughly 3,700 people remain displaced by the remaining 18 evacuation orders in the province, emergency officials say.

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