Windsor Star

State of emergency declared in B.C. blazes

300 wildfires there; also in Ont., Manitoba

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VANCOUVER • British Columbia's public safety minister is declaring a provincial state of emergency over the growing wildfire threat to prepare for potential mass evacuation­s and help secure accommodat­ion that might be needed by evacuees.

Mike Farnworth said he made the decision based on informatio­n from officials that weather conditions will lead to more severe fire behaviour and the potential for more evacuation­s.

“In a briefing last night, I received word that we'll be facing a few days of very difficult weather in the Interior,” Farnworth said in a statement.

The state of emergency goes into effect on Wednesday and gives government agencies, the fire commission­er and RCMP the authority to take whatever action necessary to fight the wildfires and protect people and communitie­s.

Farnworth said he wants to assure B.C. residents that the province is deploying all available personnel and equipment to fight the fires.

“We have reached a critical point,” he told a news conference.

Nearly 300 fires were burning across the province on Tuesday. The government said 40 evacuation orders affected about 5,700 people or almost 2,900 properties in the province. There were also 69 evacuation alerts affecting just under 33,000 people and about 16,000 properties. The alerts tell people they should be ready to flee their homes.

Continued hot and dry conditions are forecasted, with heightened wind activity in the Interior and southeaste­rn B.C., the provincial government said.

Elsewhere, four First Nations in Manitoba have been evacuated due to wildfires in the eastern part of the province. More than 1,300 people from Pauingassi, Little Grand Rapids, Bloodvein and Berens River First Nations have been sent to Winnipeg and Brandon with the help of the Canadian Red Cross.

The Red Cross said a full evacuation of Pauingassi and Little Grand Rapids was completed Monday, while similar efforts in Bloodvein and Berens River would continue for the rest of the week.

In Ontario, the province imposed new restrictio­ns on mining, rail, constructi­on and transporta­tion industries in the northwest on Tuesday to reduce the likelihood of human-caused wildfires.

The move came as 107 active wildfires burn in the region, with 32 of those not under control. The wildfires in the northwest have led to evacuation­s from three First Nations communitie­s — Poplar Hill First Nation, Deer Lake First Nation and Pikangikum First Nation — with more than 2,455 people going to communitie­s such as Sudbury, Timmins, Thunder Bay and Cornwall.

 ?? TWITTER @DYLANGALEA­S VIA REUTERS ?? Smoke billows from a wildfire seen from Highway 3 lookout near Osoyoos, B.C., south of Kelowna, on Tuesday.
The province has reached a “critical point” in the wildfires battle, says public safety minister Mike Farnworth.
TWITTER @DYLANGALEA­S VIA REUTERS Smoke billows from a wildfire seen from Highway 3 lookout near Osoyoos, B.C., south of Kelowna, on Tuesday. The province has reached a “critical point” in the wildfires battle, says public safety minister Mike Farnworth.

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