Times Colonist

Halifax-area wildfire largely contained, rain brings relief

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Heavy rain and military reinforcem­ents arrived to assist efforts on Saturday to quell the wildfires that have destroyed homes and caused evacuation­s involving thousands of people across Nova Scotia.

A major Halifax-area wildfire that has destroyed 150 homes was 85 per cent contained and no longer spreading, officials said Saturday. The news was also good across the province, where Premier Tim Houston said the total number of active wildfires declined from 10 in the morning to five by mid-afternoon.

“If you step outside you will see something beautiful: rain, and hopefully lots of it,” he told an afternoon briefing.

The only fire that remains out of control is one in Shelburne County in the southweste­rn corner of the province — the largest in Nova Scotia’s history — which remained “scary,” Houston said.

Meanwhile, at the provincial wildfire centre in Shubenacad­ie, north of Halifax, about 20 Canadian Armed Forces soldiers stood in the pouring rain outside a light armoured vehicle, or LAV.

Lt.-Col. Michael Blanchette said the initial contingent from CFB Gagetown in New Brunswick had arrived on a “factfindin­g mission” to see what military support was needed in the effort to combat the fires.

He said the armoured vehicle has a thermal sight system that might be able to detect hidden hot spots, especially at night, while soldiers can provide “lowlevel firefighti­ng capability” such as stamping out smaller hot spots after firefighte­rs have gone through.

Blanchette said military members in Atlantic Canada are used to being called in for floods and winter storms, but he has never before responded to a wildfire.

“This is the first time for us,” he said.

David Steeves, a technician of forest resources with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, told reporters Saturday morning the Halifax-area fire was sitting at 9.5 square kilometres and was unlikely to grow due to a combinatio­n of firefighti­ng efforts and long-awaited rain.

“We are moving from a state of out of control to a state of being held,” he said. “With the current resources that we have on site and with the suppressio­n efforts that have taken place, the fire is not likely to spread.”

Steeves said a number of areas of concern remain and crews continue to closely monitor hot spots around the fire’s perimeter. He warned the blaze was far from out and embers could still hide deep in places where the rain doesn’t penetrate.

The wildfire that broke out Sunday in the Halifax area raced through a number of subdivisio­ns, consuming about 200 structures — including 151 homes — and forcing evacuation­s by more than 16,000 people.

Environmen­t Canada Meteorolog­ist Bob Robichaud said between 25 and 50 millimetre­s of rain had fallen in parts of the province on Saturday, adding temperatur­es had also cooled.

Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Deputy Fire Chief Dave Meldrum said Saturday morning that the rain has brought relief, but also raises the risk that firefighte­rs could be hurt from slips or falls and makes for difficult working conditions.

“They’re going to be very very dirty, they’re going to be wet, they’re going to be cold,” he said of the firefighte­rs. “So we welcome this rain but it’s going to be a tough working day.”

He said there were two reported injuries related to heat stress so far, and one firefighte­r bumped their head while moving equipment, but nobody has been seriously hurt.

While an evacuation order was lifted on Friday for some Halifax-area residents, the city said Saturday they might not be able to return to the most significan­tly affected area for 10 to14 days. Meldrum said the evacuation zone includes areas that have been heavily damaged by fire. He told an afternoon briefing there’s still work to do before people can return, including checking for hot spots and verifying that infrastruc­ture such as roads and electrical grids are intact.

In Shelburne County, meanwhile, 6,700 people — about half the municipali­ty’s population — remained out of their homes as the blaze that forced their evacuation continued to burn out of control

The Barrington Lake wildfire, which started eight days ago, reached 230 square kilometres — the largest recorded wildfire in the province’s history. It has consumed at least 50 homes and cottages.

Two other fires considered out of control as of Saturday morning were classified as “held” later in the day.

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