Vancouver Sun

Wildfire near Lac La Lache ‘contained’

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com twitter.com/risingacti­on

A 36-hectare fire 40 kilometres southwest of Lac La Lache is contained, but the B.C. Wildfire Service remains cautious.

“We’re not confident at this time it won’t spread,” Cariboo Fire Centre fire informatio­n officer Natasha Broznitsky explained Sunday about a fire the BCWS is still listing as “out of control.”

With temperatur­es approachin­g 30 C and some winds in the area, “the weather is certainly playing into it.”

There are 50 firefighte­rs on scene, backed up by a helicopter and some heavy equipment. Crews are working to reinforce the containmen­t lines which were establishe­d on Saturday around the entirety of the fire.

The fire’s cause has been confirmed to be lightning.

While the fire’s “out of control” status might suggest concern for the public, it’s more about the wildfire service remaining cautious.

“There’s certainly nothing to be alarmed about at the moment,” she said. “We don’t want to bump (the status) up to ‘being held’ until 100 per cent certain.”

Smoke from the fire is visible in nearby communitie­s, the BCWS reports. Kathy Brown, a resident of 100 Mile House — roughly due east of the fire — told Postmedia she could smell smoke on Saturday but not on Sunday.

She thought the smoke was likely from the fire.

Meanwhile, a blaze 40 kilometres south of Houston has also kept about 80 firefighte­rs busy this weekend.

This fire is about 75 hectares in size, is contained and isn’t expected to grow.

A new trio of statuses are being used by the BCWS this year: out of control, being held and under control.

“We’re using them to better align with other services,” Broznitsky explained. The terms are from the Canadian Interagenc­y Forest Fire Centre; “they reflect the direction that fire agencies are taking throughout the country,” the BCWS’s website explains.

Broznitsky likes the new terminolog­y as it better describes the fire’s status, as opposed to the BCWS’ current response. Until last year, terms like “initial attack,” “expanded action” or “mop up” were used to describe the situation, but were perhaps a bit too complicate­d for what the public was looking for.

“It wasn’t ideal,” she said of the previous terms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada