The Prince George Citizen

Tsilqhot’in wildfire report calls for Indigenous training, infrastruc­ture

- Amy SMART

VANCOUVER — The leader of a First Nation nearly encircled by blazes during one of the worst wildfires seasons in British Columbia’s history says building firefighti­ng capacity is urgent as another season approaches.

The Tsilqhot’in First Nation released a review of the 2017 wildfire season Wednesday detailing its experience and making 33 recommenda­tions, including infrastruc­ture upgrades, sustained funding for firefighti­ng training and a one-stop reimbursem­ent process for First Nations.

Chief Joe Alphonse said while there have always been fires in the region, climate change is making them more common and severe, so there’s no time to waste.

“If you roll the dice and think this won’t happen again, you’re not going to win,” Alphonse said.

“Right now this year, we’re probably looking at the driest conditions we’ve ever seen in the Chilcotin. We had no winter up there.”

The 2017 wildfires burned more than 1.2 million hectares of land in B.C., cost $600 million and forced 65,000 people from their homes. The Tsilqhot’in made headlines when about one third of its members refused to evacuate their territory and stayed to fight the blazes instead.

“We live in a fire zone, always have. Our nation, our elders, generation after generation, kids growing up will hear their grandparen­ts talk about fighting fires on horseback, hauling buckets of water from the rivers up to the fires,” Alphonse said.

Alphonse has been a vocal critic of the wildfire response by the federal and provincial government­s, saying their failure to recognize Indigenous knowledge and firefighti­ng skills posed a greater threat to the First Nation than the fires themselves.

“When the fires hit, people automatica­lly assumed we don’t know what we’re doing,” he said.

But he also told a crowd at the University of British Columbia that the six communitie­s that comprise the Tsilqhot’in lack some basic infrastruc­ture and resources that would better equip them to protect themselves and hope to fireproof their homes and communitie­s.

The report, called The Fires Awakened Us, does not propose a specific budget for implementi­ng its recommenda­tions, which also includes more fire halls, geotechnic­al work to stabilize banks and an Indigenous­led emergency centre with culturally-appropriat­e meals and other features.

B.C.’s minister of forests, Doug Donaldson, said the government has begun acting on feedback it received from the First Nation, as well as 108 recommenda­tions made in an independen­t report last May to overhaul disaster response practices after the 2017 wildfire and flood seasons.

He said the province believes it has already addressed 18 per cent of the recommenda­tions in the Tsilqhot’in report.

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