Dry, smoky conditions persist as wildfires rage in B.C. and beyond

Hundreds of properties across the province under evacuation order, hundreds more on alert

Another hot, dry and smoky day is expected in much of B.C. as hundreds of wildfires burn throughout the province.

There are close to 300 wildfires burning in B.C. as of Monday afternoon, including four discovered on Sunday.

Late Monday afternoon, a new wildfire was spotted burning on Osoyoos Indian Band land, about six kilometres north of Osoyoos.

"It's a new and emergent situation so we have reinforcements heading to the scene, both aircraft and firefighters," said Kyla Fraser with the B.C. Wildfire Service.

Nearly 3,000 customers in the area are without power due to the wildfire. FortisBC says it was a deliberate interruption in order to support local emergency services in Oliver and Osoyoos. It says it will restore service "once the fire department deems it is safe to do so."

As of 6:30 p.m. PT, the B.C. Wildfire Service estimated the fire — dubbed the Inkaneep Creek wildfire — to be about 300 hectares in size. Firefighters on site were "reporting aggressive fire behaviour," the service tweeted.

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The Sparks Lake wildfire north of Kamloops remains the largest fire in the province. As of Sunday afternoon, it was about 450 square kilometres in size. Nearly 300 properties have been ordered to evacuate as a result of that fire, and hundreds more remain on alert.

Thompson-Nicola Regional District chair Ken Gillis said a shortage of security personnel and a great need for support at emergency operations centres have left staff fatigued.

"Everybody's exhausted," he said. "We're desperate for help but we aren't getting any."

He said they've asked for more resources from Emergency Management B.C. and hopes more RCMP officers will be made available to help with wildfire evacuees. He also hopes military support will arrive.

The Cariboo Regional District has hired security guards to keep an eye on the community surrounding 100 Mile House.

Security guard Albert Smith said looters moved into evacuated communities in 2017.

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"As soon as the people left, the looters came in and started going through peoples' houses and stealing whatever they could get, because they didn't have any security then," he said.

The RCMP says it will continue to deploy additional officers to areas that have been evacuated or have been put on evacuation alert. In particular, police officers are able to put up road blocks so no one can get into the area, and police patrols are conducted in the evacuated area to deter looting and other crimes when no one is around.

"To date, we have no reports of theft or property crime incidents within any of the evacuated areas," RCMP spokesperson Dawn Roberts said.

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EVACUATIONS

On Sunday, officials asked residents leaving their homes because of smoke to stay with friends or family, in order to leave hotel rooms free for wildfire evacuees with "no other option," as accommodations in the Thompson-Okanagan region are limited.

"All the facilities in Kamloops are full, all the facilities in Merritt are full," Gillis said.

Hundreds of people across the province have been ordered to evacuate their homes.

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Meanwhile, the B.C. SPCA is hoping to free up space in its centres for evacuees' pets by holding a half-price pet adoption promotion July 20-30.

The society says it has provided free emergency boarding for more than 80 animals in its shelters and at the Animal Evacuation Centre, set up in Kamloops on July 7, since the wildfire season began.

DRY, SMOKY CONDITIONS

While skies in B.C.'s Lower Mainland are relatively clear and bright, smoke from the wildfires has blanketed most of the province.

In fact, most of Canada is sitting beneath wildfire smoke, as fires in the Prairies and northern Ontario have added to the haze.

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Smoke rises from the White Rock Lake wildfire, around 56 kilometres northeast of Merritt, B.C., on July 16. (B.C. Wildfire Service/Twitter)

Michelle Obre, who lives in 140 Mile House just off Highway 97, left her home in 2017 as a result of wildfires. While she wasn't ordered to evacuate, she said the smoke was so heavy she didn't feel like she could stay.

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Although her home is relatively safe so far this year, she says, the smoke is so bad her four-year-old grandson can't play outside and her daughter has a bag packed in case they have to leave at a moment's notice.

Her mother, who lives in Lillooet, has had a bag packed for weeks, as the Mckay Creek fire discovered three weeks ago continues to grow.

She said the situation is extremely stressful, and usually she would take a walk in nature to decompress — but right now it's so tinder-dry she's not comfortable walking through her property.

"I live in the forest and I won't even go in there right now," she said. "Everything's brown."

The southern half of the province got no rain over the weekend, and conditions remain hot and dry.

Thunderstorms are forecast for central and northern B.C. on Monday afternoon.

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Anyone placed under an evacuation order must leave the area immediately.

Evacuation centres have been set up throughout the province to assist anyone evacuating from a community under threat from a wildfire. To find the centre closest to you, visit the Emergency Management B.C. website.

Evacuees are encouraged to register online with Emergency Support Services, whether or not they access services at an evacuation centre.

This article was originally published by CBC News and written by Courtney Dickson. With files from Johanna Wagstaffe, Georgie Smyth, Betsy Trumpener, Meera Bains and Daybreak Kamloops.