Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

Community's resilience celebrated 1 year after B.C. wildfire

After a wildfire burning more than 450 sq. km 100 km east of Kamloops a year ago, the Skwlx te Secwpemclecw First Nation is embracing the resiliency of people affected by the fire.

Skwlx te Secwpemclecw holds a commemoration to showcase strength in aftermath of wildfire

Fire engulfs a forest with a shack structure in front.
The Bush Creek East wildfire on Squilax Mountain prompted an evacuation alert for residents of Sorrento on Aug.18, 2023, while others across Shuswap Lake were forced to flee the Lower East Adams Lake wildfire by boat. (Columbia Shuswap Regional District/Facebook)

When Skwlx te Secwpemclecw First Nation Chief Kkpi7 James Tomma and his family fled their home after the Bush Creek wildfire, they left everything behind.

Tomma remembers his brothers being trapped underneath a bridge andthe hardships experienced by other band members who lost their homes and had to uproot their lives.

He says he never thoughthis own community would be impacted by wildfire.

What followed, Tomma says, was the beginning of rebuilding everything they had lost.

"It's been emotional for me I'll remember for the rest of my life," Tomma said. "Before, it always happened to somebody else and not you, but [that's]when the reality hit."

The red glow from two adjacent wildfires seen from across a lake.
The Bush Creek East wildfire burning on the west side of Adams Lake, northeast of Kamloops, B.C., on Aug. 4, 2023. (Submitted by Josh Jones)

It's been one year since the Bush Creek East wildfire swept through B.C.'s Shuswap region.

Lasting nearly two months, from mid-July to the end of September 2023, it surrounded Shuswap communities like Scotch Creek, Celista and Sorrento, causing devastation and forcing residents to flee their homes.

Over 130 properties were destroyed, another 37partially damaged, and about 3,500 were placed under evacuation orders.

The wildfirecaused over $720 million in insured damage, according to the Insurance Bureau of Canada.

One year later, the Skwlx te Secwpemclecw First Nation isholding an event Sunday in Chase, B.C., to commemorate the resilienceof the people affectedby the fire.

The celebration will feature speeches, singingand a community walk-along with food for people to enjoy.

Tomma said the commemoration will celebrate that people are still there,rebuilding the area.

The First Nation is completing three subdivisions to replace the homes that were lost, he said. About 70 per cent of the Skwlx te Secwpemclecw First Nation is returning and Tomma expects to go back in December when the last subdivision is complete.

A barren landscape shows the shells of burned-out cars under a dull orange sky.
Destroyed homes and property are pictured in Scotch Creek, B.C., on Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Sean Coubrough, the regional fire chief of the Columbia-Shuswap Regional Distrct (CRSD) was at work when the fire broke out and remembers it well.

Coubroughsaysthe B.C. Wildfire Service washearing reports from local fire chiefs aboutthe winds picking up andthe fire beginning to enter the NorthShuswap communities. He says the CRSDbecameconcernedand put together a team of six fire trucksto respond.

The CRSD tried to cross the Squilax Bridge but couldn't due to the blazeand focused on savingthe buildings nearby,Coubrough said. The Shuswap andScotch Creek-Lee Creek fire departments were protecting the bridge andbuildings on the other side.

A destroyed building.
The Scotch Creek fire department building was destroyed by wildfires last August. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"Communities come together when these events happen," Coubrough said.

Shuswap summer resident Terri Burris was one of the few who stayed in the area after the wildfire broke out.

Burriswas at her cabin eating dinner when she saw the fire and smoke. She says she started to panic.

"To look up and see this glow [and]line of fire it was unsettling, disturbing."

However, she saysShuswap has always felt like home and she wanted to stay and help.

Burris's cabin wasn't underan evacuation order, but she went to check her friends' cabins nearby to see if they were intact. She says she and her husband got on her boat, went out on the lakeand soon saw thick clouds of smoke.

"The smoke was so dense you couldn't see a single thing," Burris said, adding that she used a GPS to navigate to the cabins.

When she got there, she says she took videos and uploaded them to Facebook so her friends could see themand also as evidence for insurance.

Some cabins were safe. Others had burneddown.

Two men walk through a pile or rubble.
Jason Martinson, who owns Triton Docks, and his friend John visit Jason's destroyed shop and home that was burnt by wildfires in Scotch Creek last year. A number of properties were razed by raging wildfires in the Shuswap. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"There were many, many places burnedto the ground and really sad. So I did the videos so people could see one way or the other.

"It was very unsettling to see your piece of paradise turn into something you don't recognize," Burris said.

Evacuation orders and alerts. What you need to know:

Despite the wildfire situation, the Skwlx te Secwpemclecw First Nation ismaintaining a positive outlook.

"Everybody is looking forward to 'What does tomorrow bring? They have a positive attitude in which I'm really pleased. We want to go forward. It only makes us stronger," Tomma said.

Everyone is welcome to attend the event, Tomma said. The commemoration will take place at the Quaaout Lodge and Spa at Talking Rock Golf Resort from 11 a.m. to 10p.m. PT.

A man hugs his daughter.
Celista firefighter Jordon Byerley hugs his daughter Camilla near his son Brixton while in a boat taking evacuees away from the Bush Creek East wildfire last August. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

With files from Daybreak Kamloops