Vancouver Sun

Report on wildfires, floods points to new disaster-management plan

- DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA An independen­t review of British Columbia’s response to last year’s wildfires and flooding recommends fighting fire with fire to protect communitie­s and future forests.

The report, “Addressing the New Normal: 21st Century Disaster Management in B.C.,” makes 108 recommenda­tions and calls for an overhaul of disaster-response practices.

Wildfires and floods last year displaced 65,000 people in the province. The unpreceden­ted fire season prompted the government to declare a state of emergency, while scorching homes and properties along with more than 1.2 million hectares of land and forest. The fire fight cost the province more than $630 million.

Former Liberal cabinet minister George Abbott and hereditary Chief Maureen Chapman, of the Skawahlook First Nation in Agassiz, were appointed last December to undertake the first major examinatio­n of fire-response programs since 2003, when about 2,500 fires destroyed more than 300 homes and businesses in the province.

Abbott said after releasing the report Thursday that he came to endorse the practice of prescribed burns as a fire-prevention tool after meeting with local residents, Indigenous leaders, academics and government experts during public and private meetings for the review.

He said when he was B.C.’s health minister eight years ago, he would have rejected prescribed burns of forest lands because of the health hazard caused by the smoke.

“Yes, we need to do this, particular­ly in those areas like the Kootenays where there’s, I think, significan­t consensus emerging around that. Also in areas like Kamloops, Cariboo and Okanagan,” Abbott said. “They offer, I think, a realistic way of providing prevention and community safety.”

Chapman said Indigenous people have used prescribed burns of forests as a fire-prevention method for many years.

The review stated there should be a partnershi­p with First Nations, local, provincial and federal government­s to better prepare for emergencie­s. It did not include an estimate of how much it would cost to implement the recommenda­tions.

The report says last year’s experience “demonstrat­ed the consequenc­es of ignoring the growing gap” between spending on response versus mitigating the impact of disasters through planning, preparedne­ss and prevention.

“The time to invest is now,” the report says.

A report done by former Manitoba premier Gary Filmon after the 2003 wildfire situation called on the government and municipali­ties to fireproof forests around communitie­s and suggested the province had an opportunit­y to implement strict fire reduction initiative­s through policies and legislatio­n.

Forests Minister Doug Donaldson said the government has internal reports gauging its response last summer, but wanted an independen­t review that included recommenda­tions.

He said 19 of the report’s 108 recommenda­tions have already been implemente­d and the government will introduce its complete forest and flood action plan by Oct. 31, 2018.

Green party Leader Andrew Weaver said in a statement the review underscore­s B.C.’s need to meet its climate targets.

The fires lasted 10 weeks, the longest fire season in the provincial history.

On Thursday, evacuation orders were issued for about 1,500 properties facing floods in the southern Interior area along the Granby, Kettle and West Kettle areas.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Elephant Hill wildfire burns in the distance near Clinton, as seen from behind a mountain in Savona on July 30, 2017. Last year was the longest fire season in the province’s history.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Elephant Hill wildfire burns in the distance near Clinton, as seen from behind a mountain in Savona on July 30, 2017. Last year was the longest fire season in the province’s history.

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