Times Colonist

Quebec looks abroad for help battling wildfires as threat grows

- JACOB SEREBRIN

Quebec Premier François Legault says his government is looking internatio­nally for support as it struggles to battle more than 160 forest fires.

With more than 480 wilderness firefighte­rs on the ground, Quebec can fight around 30 fires, Legault told reporters Monday, adding that normally firefighte­rs would come from other provinces to help.

“When I talk to the premiers of other provinces, they have their hands full,” Legault told a briefing in Quebec City.

He said no lives have been lost in the fires, but firefighte­rs were forced to pull back from the hamlet of Clova, Que., around 325 kilometres northwest of Montreal.

“Unfortunat­ely, we lost control,” Legault said. “We are going to be obliged to let Clova burn.” Authoritie­s said the community’s 36 residents have been moved.

Later in the day, Quebec’s wildfire prevention agency, SOPFEU, said the intensity of the fire in the area had exceeded the capacity of water bombers, but it was continuing to work to protect the community. It said on Twitter that no residences had yet been destroyed, though some cottages might have burned.

Legault said an additional 200 firefighte­rs are coming from France and the U.S., and Quebec is also in talks with Costa Rica, Portugal and Chile as it searches for additional resources.

Fires have forced about 10,000 people from their homes in the province, with most of those in the northweste­rn Abitibi region and the eastern Côte-Nord region.

Few of those residents will be able to return home in the short term, Legault said. “The winds are changing rapidly and we have to follow the weather.”

With rain forecast for the Côte-Nord, Legault said he is now most worried about the Abitibi, where no rain is expected for five days.

On Monday afternoon, the municipali­ty of St-Lambert, along the Ontario border in Abitibi, declared a state of emergency and ordered its 200 residents to leave their homes. The neighbouri­ng community of Normétal was evacuated the day before.

Normétal is one of two communitie­s in the area that the government is watching closely, Legault said. The other is Lebelsur-Quévillon. Firefighte­rs there did an “extraordin­ary” job to protect a pulp mill, spraying it with water for hours, Legault said.

“It was very close, but they managed to save it, but there’s now another fire, coming from another direction that’s approachin­g Lebel-sur-Quévillon,” he said.

More than 160 fires have been reported in the province, including at least 114 that are out of control.

Kateri Champagne Jourdain, the minister responsibl­e for the Côte-Nord region, told a news conference that 138 Canadian Armed Forces members arrived in the area Sunday, with another 100 expected Monday, adding that the troops have received training so they can support the province’s wilderness firefighte­rs.

Smoke from the fires has also led to Environmen­t Canada smog warnings across large swaths of Quebec, including in Montreal.

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