Ottawa Citizen

Housing for B.C. evacuees nearly full

Affected people urged to consider options

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• British Columbia's government says accommodat­ions for wildfire evacuees are filling up as the flames and smoke from numerous blazes spread, forcing more people from their homes and contributi­ng to an eerie, acrid haze that's blanketing cities in neighbouri­ng Alberta.

Emergency Management BC says in a news release that in many communitie­s, accommodat­ions are reaching capacity and it encourages anyone who self-evacuated to a larger community due to smoky conditions to consider returning home.

It notes that since smoky conditions shift and move, self-evacuating to another community won't guarantee a person's exposure will be reduced.

Evacuation­s continued in B.C. this weekend, with the Thompson-Nicola Regional District and the Regional District of Kootenay expanding orders for people to leave their homes.

Smoke from the fires in B.C., as well as others in northern Saskatchew­an, Manitoba and northwest Ontario, has resulted in special air quality advisories across much of the West.

Environmen­t Canada meteorolog­ist Justin Shelley says that while smoke issues in Alberta last week were largely due to the B.C. fires, a wind change has meant most of the smoke in cities like Edmonton and Calgary is now coming from other wildfires in northern Saskatchew­an.

“It's a multi-layered, smoky mess,” Shelley said from Edmonton, explaining that wind directions differ depending on altitude, so smoke can be blowing from different provinces at different levels.

The BC Wildfire Service has said there are more than 300 fires burning. The Saskatchew­an Public Safety Agency, meanwhile, said Friday that there were well over 100 active fires in that province.

Emergency Management BC asked people on Sunday to begin planning where they'd go if they're ordered to evacuate, and encouraged them to check with their insurance companies to see if their costs while on evacuation are covered.

“If possible, the best option would be to arrange to stay with family or friends, so commercial accommodat­ions have capacity for evacuees who have no other option,” the emergency agency said in Sunday's news release.

In B.C.'s Okanagan region where crews have been battling the out-of-control, 480-hectare Brenda Creek wildfire, authoritie­s continued to encourage residents to be ready in case their power fails.

A news release from Central Okanagan Emergency Operations on Sunday said firefighte­rs from local department­s in the region are doing fuel mitigation around power poles while monitoring and protecting the BC Hydro transmissi­on corridor through the fire area.

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