The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Residents visit B.C town destroyed by forest fire

- JENNIFER GAUTHIER

LYTTON, B.C. — Residents of Lytton, B.C., were able to see the remains of their homes on Friday for the first time since they were forced to flee for their lives days ago.

The central British Columbia town made headlines at the end of June for breaking Canada’s heat record — hitting 49.6°C at its hottest

— and was then almost completely destroyed in a forest fire caused in part by the heat wave.

The town of around 250 people had just minutes to evacuate on June 30, along with roughly 2,000 people living in nearby Indigenous communitie­s, after a forest fire was started by what authoritie­s suspect was human activity.

Ninety percent of the town was destroyed, Lytton Mayor Jan Polderman said.

“A few buildings survived in town but nearly every home in the centre of the village is gone. Where many buildings stood is now simply charred earth,” Polderman wrote in an open letter published in the Merritt Herald, the local newspaper. “We want everyone to know that their bravery was incredible in the face of this unimaginab­le horror.”

Residents had not been able to return to the town until Friday due to ongoing fires and toxic substances in the area. Roughly 250 people — including residents and media — were taken on bus tours of the town on Friday afternoon, according to Thompson-Nicola Regional District, which organized the tours.

“Didn’t get much sleep last night thinking about the bus tour into Lytton today,” resident Edith Loring-Kuhanga posted on Twitter. “I know it’s going to be heartbreak­ing but I need to go see our little town even though it’s decimated!”

The scenes were a shock to residents, one said to the CBC.

“We’ve seen the videos, but until you actually see it, it’s hard to believe,” Chloe Ross said. “I understand why others don’t want to go. Nothing about this feels real.”

Two people died in the fire. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who have been coordinati­ng family reunificat­ion efforts, said on Friday no one has been reported missing so far.

 ?? JENNIFER GAUTHIER • REUTERS ?? The charred remnants of homes and buildings, destroyed by a wildfire on June 30, are seen during a media tour by authoritie­s in Lytton, B.C., on Friday.
JENNIFER GAUTHIER • REUTERS The charred remnants of homes and buildings, destroyed by a wildfire on June 30, are seen during a media tour by authoritie­s in Lytton, B.C., on Friday.

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