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B.C. extends state of emergency by 2 weeks to due wildfires, drought

27 of 34 water basins are at the highest drought levels

The province is extending the state of emergency as wildfires and drought continue to plague B.C.

Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma announced the extension during a wildfire update on Thursday (Aug. 31). She was joined by Forests Minister Bruce Ralston.

鈥淭he nature and unpredictability of the wildfires that we are experiencing this year means that we all need to remain vigilant,鈥 explained Ma.

More than 4,200 people are still on evacuation order, while another 65,000 are on alert.

She added that next week as students across B.C. return to school, for some families the school year won鈥檛 be the same. There are two public schools in areas under evacuation order and 14 public schools and three independent schools under evacuation alert.

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The emergency management and education ministries are working with wildfire-impacted school districts to ensure there is a plan in place for students should their schools not be able to open.

鈥淭his may involve supporting students to start school in a neighbouring district, moving schools to another building to start their learning or moving to online learning through one of the provincial online schools.鈥

Some school districts are providing additional counselling services recognizing that some people have lost their homes.

Ma said the current weather is a sign the province is moving slowly beyond the worst parts of the wildfire season, but a 鈥渂alanced perspective鈥 is needed. B.C. is far from being in the clear and the wildfires are being exacerbated by the drought.

鈥淲hile a handful of basins have kicked down a step, we have not experienced anywhere near the rainfall needed to see those levels come down in a significant way. In the northern part of the province, they didn鈥檛 see nearly the same level of rain as southern and coastal regions.鈥

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Ma said the northeastern region of the province is expected to continue to see unseasonably warm temperatures, smoke and strong winds, which could then lead to previously under control wildfires becoming out of control again.

Of the province鈥檚 34 water basins, 27 of those are at the two highest drought levels.

More than 1.91 million hectares have burned so far this year from 2,027 wildfires.

There are currently 42 wildfires actively burning in the province, said Ralston. Twelve of those are fires of note that are especially visible or a threat to public safety.

鈥淭he weather and rain in the southern half of the province will allow crews to make good progress in the coming days,鈥 said Ralston, adding that BC Wildfire Service has shifted some crews and aircraft to the north in anticipation of increased fire behaviour.

鈥淲hile these rains are welcome, at this stage, they are not big enough, significant enough, to change the trajectory of the ongoing drought conditions here in the province.鈥

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Ralston explained the drought continues to get worse and much more severe in most of the province. That鈥檚 due to several factors including less rain than usual over the last 12 months and an early snow melt.

鈥淎t this point, we need several inches or more of rainfall over an extended period to help alleviate our drought conditions.鈥

As significant rainfall doesn鈥檛 usually come until the fall, Ralston said that means much of B.C. can anticipate drought conditions to persist through the province for the next while.

More to come.



lauren.collins@blackpress.ca

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Lauren Collins

About the Author: Lauren Collins

I'm a provincial reporter for Black Press Media's provincial team, after my journalism career took me around B.C. since I was 19 years old.
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