Trudeau's description of Lytton, B.C. during climate summit draws ire of local residents - Action News
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British Columbia

Trudeau's description of Lytton, B.C. during climate summit draws ire of local residents

A group of Lytton, B.C. residents wrote to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to express their frustration over his description of their village during the COP26 summit, saying it is a reflection of how they've been treated as 'non-existent.'

The prime minister referenced the summer fire that ravaged the village to illustrate impact of climate change

Trudeau delivers Canada's national statement at COP26 summit

3 years ago
Duration 4:59
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada will impose a hard cap on emissions from the oil and gas sector during his remarks at COP26 summit in Glasgow.

Denise O'Connor and other residents of Lytton, B.C., say they weren't impressed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's national statement at the COP26 climate summit.

On Nov. 1, Trudeau referenced the fire that destroyed the small Fraser Valley village over the summer to illustrate the impact of climate change.

"In Canada, there was a town called Lytton. I say 'was' because on June 30, it burned to the ground. The day before, the temperature had hit 49.6 C, the hottest ever recorded in our country. Canada is warming, on average, twice as quickly as the rest of the world."

"The science is clear: we must do more, and faster," said Trudeau.

Lytton, a village of less than 300 residents before the fire,is currentlybeing rebuilt. Just last month,the municipal government unveiled its plan for Lytton's short-term recovery, which includestemporary emergency housing for returning residents.

Two days after Trudeau's speech, O'Connor and fellow members of the Lytton Chamber of Commerce's business recovery steering committee sent him a letter to voice their frustration.

"To hear you, Prime Minister, referto our town in the past tense breaks our hearts," they said in the letter. "The town of Lytton still exists it exists in the hearts and minds of every resident and every business."

The committee members also complained about what they say is Ottawa's lack of support for Lytton.

"We have been treated as non-existent we have seen no assistance from the federal government in helping us get back to our homes."

The town of Lytton, B.C., photographed from a hillside on Oct. 29, 2021. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

O'Connor, wholost herhome to the fire,says Lytton has received support from the province for rebuildingbut none from Ottawa.

"He [Trudeau] is using our name, and yet we haven't seen anything from the federal government as far as support," O'Connorsaid Tuesday to host Sarah Penton on CBC's Radio West.

"We just heard last night [on Nov. 8] that we're not going to be getting a post office they're not coming back yet."

In an emailed statement to CBC, the prime minister's office did notaddress the chamber's complaint about Trudeau's description of Lytton, but saidthe federal government has matched every dollar donated to the Canadian Red Cross's B.C. Wildfires Appeal Fundand will provide further assistance as necessary.

O'Connor also disputes what Trudeau said was the cause of the fire that ravaged Lytton.

"Climate change did not start the fire in Lytton," she said. "We had [that] record heat. We had strong winds and a spark from the train and that's what started the fire, not climate change."

But on Oct. 14, investigators from Canada's Transportation Safety Board said they have not found evidence that trains running near Lytton were responsible for the fire.

O'Connor now lives in her parents' house in Lytton, whichwasn't damaged by the blaze.

"Lytton is not a 'was.' There are over 30 homes still here with people living in them," she said. "There are so many people here still, and that's what the community is. It's not a 'was.'"

READ| Lytton Chamber of Commerce's letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Nov. 3

With files from Radio West and Brady Strachan