B.C. Premier David Eby announces expert task force to better respond to emergencies - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. Premier David Eby announces expert task force to better respond to emergencies

As officials tour the provinces Interior, evacuation alerts and orders have been expanded in the central part of the province where wind combined with hot and dry weather are accelerating fires.

Eby visiting wildfire-hit areas of Interior as flames surge again in central, northeastern parts of province

An East Asian woman walks next to a tall white man.
Minister of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness Bowinn Ma, left, and B.C. Premier David Eby walk together as they arrive for a meeting at the Columbia Shuswap Regional District offices, in Salmon Arm, B.C. on Monday. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

As wildfire activity increases in central British Columbia, Premier David Eby returned to one of the hardest hit areas of the province on Monday.

Eby, along with Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma, arevisitingKamloops and Salmon Arm in the province's southern Interior on Monday to meet those affected by this season's devastating fires.

Prior to a news conference at the airport inKamloops, Eby announced a new task force would be struck to look at lessons learned and best practices around the response to wildfires, drought, heat, floods and other emergencies affecting the province.

"We must continually update and enhance our prevention and response measures to the near-constant series of emergencies we are facing as a result of climate change," said Eby in a statement.

WATCH | New task force not meant to be traditional review of wildfire season, premier says:

B.C. Premier David Eby outlines new emergency-response task force

12 months ago
Duration 2:12
A new task force in B.C. will work with the public service but also with front-line workers who respond to disasters such as wildfires and flooding, in order to improve how the province reacts to disasters exacerbated by climate change.

The release did not say who would make up the panel or when it would be established. Eby said it would include experts but also people responding on the front lines of emergencies and perhaps people from other jurisdictions with applicable knowledge.

Eby said some of its main tasks will be to devise how best to collaborate with communities and First Nations, incorporate municipal firefighting and provide support to people who are directly affected.

A white man leans over as he listens to workers sitting at a long table in a large room.
B.C. Premier David Eby says the task force will not be the traditional wildfire season review that has occurred in previous years. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Need to leverage local knowledge: Eby

One of the central conflicts this wildfire season occurred in B.C.'s Shuswap region in August when residents who defied evacuation orders to save structures criticized the province for not being nimble enough to support them.

Eby said in touring fire-affected areas this summer he has learned that efforts from people on the ground in their communities need to be part of a provincial, co-ordinated response.

"We could be doing a better job of leveraging local knowledge and expertise when it comes to preventing and fighting wildfires," he said.

A white man looks outside a helicopter window at burnt landscape.
B.C. Premier David Eby looks out at Scotch Creek, B.C., while viewing areas of the Shuswap affected by the Bush Creek East wildfire on a helicopter flight from Kamloops to Salmon Arm, on Monday. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The task force will also assess how to provide timely access to short-term financial supports and accommodation for residents forced to flee their homes due to evacuation orders.

"We owe it to all of those who fought the fires, left their homes behind, and opened their hearts to feed and house evacuees to find ways to support them better as climate disasters get worse and more frequent," Eby said.

Charred trees are seen around a pristine green patch of grass on a golf course.
Trees burned by the Bush Creek East wildfire are seen in and around Talking Rock Golf Course in Squilax, B.C., on Monday. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Eby also promised that whatever the task force came up with would be put to use. His government has faced criticism that previous reviews of wildfire responses were not heeded, especially about recommendations overcommunication gaps, poor relations and co-operation with First Nations, and inadequate prevention measures.

Opposition B.C. United House Leader Todd Stone said in a statement the government is embarking on an exercise in bureaucracy despite not implementing recommendations from a previous wildfire report issued in 2018.

"How can they think more reports and investigations will solve this problem when the last one is still collecting dust on their desks?" he said, adding the Opposition will introduce its wildfire mitigation, response and recovery plan in the coming weeks.

Green Leader Sonia Furstenau said the government should bring together community leaders, First Nations and local politicians to focus on climate emergency response instead of appointing a closed-door, expert task force.

"It's deep community work that is desperately needed now and has been for a long time," she said in a statement. "No government has properly stepped up to the plate on this."

An aerial image shows charred trees and debris in a town.
Structures and trees burned by the Bush Creek East Wildfire are seen in an aerial view in Scotch Creek, B.C. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

More orders, alerts

The premier's tour comes as several evacuation alerts were expanded in the Fort St. James and Vanderhoof areasdue to wildfires burning nearby.

An evacuation order was also expanded on Sunday by the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako due to the Tatuk Lake wildfire.

The fire of note, which the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) says is now 250 square kilometres in size, is burning around 100 kilometres southwest of Prince George.

Also on Sunday an evacuation order was expanded for properties in a remote area about 80 kilometres northwest of Prince George due to the Great Beaver Lake wildfire, which is now 147 square kilometres in size, according to the BCWS.

Flames and smoke in and above a forested area.
An undated photo of the Peacock Creek wildfire south of Houston, B.C., one of many fires still burning out of control in the centre of the province. (B.C. Wildfire Service)

'Stay alert'

The wildfire service said Sunday that weather in the Prince George Fire Centre area, which spans the northeast quarter of the province, is expected to be warm, dryand windy.

The BCWS said strong gusts of wind are possible this weekand, coupled with "persistent drought conditions," it expects increased wildfire activity and smoky conditions "across the region."

"Individuals in the vicinity of existing wildfires are encouraged to stay alert and aware of the current wildfire situation as wildfires are dynamic and conditions may change rapidly," the BCWS said.

There are still more than 400 wildfires burning in the province and more than 22,500 square kilometres of land have burned so far in a record-breaking fire season.

Meanwhile, officials in the OkanaganValley said Sunday that they aren't expecting to lift any evacuation orders or alerts related to the out-of-control McDougall Creek wildfire.

In an update Sunday, Central Okanagan Emergency Operations said hundreds of properties remain evacuated, including 122 in the City of West Kelowna.

Properties still under evacuation orders due to the blaze "are more remote, topographically challenging and/or close to active wildfire areas,"it added.

Campfire, burning bans

BCWS information officer Shaelee Stearns said this weekend saw hotter temperatures, decreased humidityand increased fire activity.

She wants to remind people in the Kamloops Fire Centre area, which covers much of the central southern Interior,that there is currently a complete prohibition on campfires and open burning.

"It's important people for just to be aware of that," she said. "If you do see someone having a campfire, you can report it, it's beneficial. Just make sure everyone's practising caution as we go. We're still into these warmer temperatures."

With files from the Canadian Press and Michelle Gomez