National Post

Residents of B.C. village get look at fire damage

Trains halted amid fears over wildfires’ spread

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LYTTON, B.C. •Residents of Lytton, B.C., return to their Fraser Canyon village Friday for a first glimpse of what remains after fleeing for their lives ahead of a raging wildfire last week.

The displaced residents have sheltered since then in communitie­s as far away as Kamloops, Merritt, Chilliwack and Whistler, waiting for some direction about what comes next.

The Thompson-nicola Regional District has arranged bus tours for residents who are prepared to see what’s left of their village, which set a record for the hottest temperatur­e in Canada during a heat wave just days before the fire.

A cause of the blaze remains under investigat­ion, although local Indigenous leaders say train movement during drought-like conditions made their people anxious.

CN Railway has said its trains were not linked to the fire and Canadian Pacific resumed its service through Lytton on Monday.

Federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra has ordered all train traffic through Lytton to halt for 48 hours effective immediatel­y, while residents are on the escorted tours through the village.

The Thompson-nicola Regional District has organized bus tours, saying that while unescorted entry isn’t safe, work has been done to clear a way to permit taking residents through by bus.

More than 200 wildfires are currently burning in B.C. as the recent heat wave and parched conditions combined to raise the fire risk in many parts of the province to high or extreme.

Marc Miller, minister of Indigenous services, says fires across B.C. have devastated many communitie­s and families.

“At this critical juncture, it is imperative that we all listen to the voices of Indigenous leaders and engage meaningful­ly on a path forward that respects their needs and priorities, while ensuring rail safety and security,” Miller says in the Transport Canada statement ordering the two-day halt to trains on tracks between Kamloops and Boston Bar.

Lightning continues to challenge wildfire crews in British Columbia, but the BC Wildfire Service is also reporting progress on at least one of the 15 most threatenin­g fires in the province.

Hundreds of lightning strikes sparked more than half of the roughly two dozen new fires recorded across B.C. since Thursday.

But the wildfire service says slightly cooler weather and modest rainfall earlier in the week helped crews build guards around the entire perimeter of a roughly three-squarekilo­metre fire that forced evacuation orders and alerts near Durand Lake, southwest of Kamloops.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Destroyed and damaged structures and vehicles greeted returning residents of Lytton, B.C., on Friday after a wildfire destroyed most of the village on June 30, the day after the village set a heat record for Canada.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Destroyed and damaged structures and vehicles greeted returning residents of Lytton, B.C., on Friday after a wildfire destroyed most of the village on June 30, the day after the village set a heat record for Canada.

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