Times Colonist

Calls for wildfire help, evacuees fill hotels

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MERRITT — A regional politician in the Interior is calling for more support amid a “dire” wildfire situation that he said has filled every available hotel with fleeing evacuees and stretched local security resources beyond their capacity.

Ken Gillis, who chairs the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, signed an evacuation order Monday for 28 properties near the community of Westwold, the latest in a string of such orders he has signed in recent days. He had to direct the latest evacuees to Kelowna, more than 100 kilometres away, because of the lack of accommodat­ions closer to home, he said.

The district also put in a request with the provincial government for an additional 100 to 150 security and policing personnel to secure evacuated areas.

“It’s a nightmare,” Gillis said in an interview Monday. “We have absolutely nothing left (for accommodat­ions) in Kamloops, we have nothing left in Merritt, we have nothing left in Salmon Arm. They’re absolutely full.”

Gillis said he considered directing evacuees to Cache Creek, but decided against it because the community is under an evacuation alert. An alert means residents must be prepared to leave their homes at a moment’s notice.

“Some of the places are just places we can’t send people to because two hours from then we might need to uproot them and send them somewhere else.”

The fires affecting the regional district were among some 300 burning across the province on Monday. Several new evacuation orders and alerts were posted over the weekend by regional government­s across B.C.’s southern Interior.

They came as the provincial

organizati­on that co-ordinates emergency support warned that available accommodat­ion for thousands of wildfire evacuees was strained to the limit in the Thompson and Cariboo regions, and some evacuees were being sheltered as far south as Chilliwack.

Emergency Management B.C. has encouraged anyone who decided to leave their homes for larger communitie­s due to smoky conditions to consider returning to make space for those facing a direct threat. Smoky conditions shift and move, so those who left their homes don’t necessaril­y reduce their exposure, it said in a statement Sunday.

Environmen­t Canada had air quality statements in effect across Western Canada on Monday due to smoke from wildfires between B.C. and Ontario.

Ingrid Jarrett, president and CEO of the B.C. Hotel Associatio­n,

said it has been working with Emergency Management B.C. for several weeks identifyin­g and designatin­g hotels with space for evacuees.

Overall, she said there were more rooms available than were needed, including in the Thompson and Cariboo regions, but the availabili­ty was concentrat­ed in urban areas like the Lower Mainland.

Part of the problem is a staffing shortage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which means some hotels don’t have enough staff to operate all of the rooms. While Jarrett did not have figures on overall room capacity, she said about 30,000 tourism and hospitalit­y jobs are unfilled.

“We have some that have many rooms that are blocked off or wings that … they simply cannot sell them for whatever reason because they just don’t have anybody to clean the rooms,” she said.

Internatio­nal students, visitors on working holiday visas and others who often work in hotels haven’t yet returned to B.C., she said.

She also noted that motels, lodges and other accommodat­ions qualify as emergency shelters in addition to hotels.

Beyond his concerns about accommodat­ion, Gillis said the regional district hopes that additional security and policing resources would keep people out of evacuated areas, prevent looting and give peace of mind to anyone who is hesitant to leave their homes that the area will be secured.

Ultimately, he said he hopes the provincial government shares the request with their federal counterpar­ts in case the Canadian Armed Forces can be called in.

“We’re looking for an organizati­on of some sort that can bring on a full force that has its own accommodat­ion, meals transport,” effectivel­y setting up camps, Gillis said.

Emergency Management B.C. said in a statement the RCMP are working with the regional district on the request.

Dawn Roberts, director in charge of communicat­ions for the RCMP in B.C., said the Mounties have assigned a liaison officerto review it.

Typically, the Mounties will work with local government­s to set up checkpoint­s as well as deploy roving officers. The RCMP identifies and deploys resources on a daily basis and has the benefit of drawing staff from other jurisdicti­ons, she said.

The RCMP is already readying additional resources for populated areas — such as 100 Mile House, Ashcroft and Clinton — where evacuation alerts recently went into effect.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A helicopter flies past the Tremont Creek wildfire burning on the mountains above Ashcroft.
THE CANADIAN PRESS A helicopter flies past the Tremont Creek wildfire burning on the mountains above Ashcroft.

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