Evacuation area grows around B.C.'s Slocan Lake due to wildfires - Action News
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British Columbia

Evacuation area grows around B.C.'s Slocan Lake due to wildfires

The Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK) has expanded its evacuation order for the B.C. village of Slocan to include six properties and the Evans Creek Campground on the west side of Slocan Lake.

Increase in activity expected on Ponderosa and Mulvey Creek wildfires burning either side of village of Slocan

Two firefighting crews clearing debris at a wildfire zone.
Firefighters are establishing control lines within the Slocan Lake Complex where raging wildfires prompted evacuation orders for the entire B.C. village of Slocan on Sunday morning. (B.C. Wildfire Service/Twitter)

The Regional District of Central Kootenay(RDCK) has expanded its evacuation order for the B.C. village of Slocan to include six properties and the Evans Creek Campgroundin the west side of Slocan Lake.

The latest upgrade follows theregional district'sannouncement late Saturdayaskingresidents and visitors in Slocan,acommunity of about 380 people in southeastern B.C., to evacuate by 8 a.m. PT Sunday.

The B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) saidit's expecting an increase in activity on the Ponderosa wildfire, now mapped at 6.7square kilometres, and the Mulvey Creek wildfireat about 11square kilometres, burning on the either side of the village.

According to the Ministry of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness, 1,800 people and 1,200 properties are under evacuation orders across B.C.

Slocan Mayor Jessica Lunnsaidthe skies were filled with ominous black smoke while she drove out of her community.

Smoke rises from the mountains, with some trailers in the foreground.
Smoke from the Mulvey Creek wildfire in the Central Kootenay region of B.C. in this photo posted by the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) on July 23. (B.C. Wildfire Service/X)

Lunn saidmost villageresidents had already left Sunday morning.

"I did a drive through the community, through the village, looking, and most people had left by that point," she said.

"And it just seemedthere was that quiet ominous feeling of just thick, thick smoke."

Lunn said being able to give people notice ahead of time was a silver lining and helped officials organize a bus for those who couldn't leaveto take them to an evacuation centre in Castlegar, nearly 70 kilometres south of Slocan.

"That did give the community some time to prepare, even though most families and individuals already had a plan in place, because we had been on [evacuation]alert," she said.

But some locals still haven't evacuated yet, saidDan Seguin, the regionaldistrict'semergency operations centre director.

"I don't have numbers of how many people have chosen to stay behind. It happens with every evacuation order at this point," Seguintold CBC News.

"It's an unsafe area [and] there's a reason why BCWSrecommended thearea be on evacuation order and we just urge people to leave the area when they are notified."

Evacuees are directed to head south to the Emergency Support Services (ESS) reception centre at Selkirk College near Castlegar.

Rick Owen, a longtime Slocan Valley resident,was one among many peopleat the centre waiting to register to access accommodation and other supports.

A profile shot of an elderly man outside a sliding door.
Rick Owens was evacuated more than a week ago from Silverton. He moved to Slocan to stay with a friend but now is forced to flee again. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

"You can feel for those people in Fort McMurray," he told CBC News, referring tothe devastatingwildfire in 2016 that forced nearly 90,000 to flee in the northeastern Alberta community.

"Some people say:'Well, why me?' I know the answer to that. Why not you? Who are you?" he added.

Owens, who lives near the village of Silverton, about 28 kilometres north of Slocan, has already been forced toevacuate twice this summer.

Last week, the regional districtordered evacuations for properties south of the village of Silvertondue to the Aylwin Creek wildfire.

"It wears on you," said Owens, who had moved to a friend's house in Slocan after leaving his residence, only to relocate again less than 10 days later.

He saidhe will now bestayingwith some friends inCastlegar.

According toSeguin, it's too soon to estimate when people might be able to return home.

"I wish I had a crystal ball and I could say when they could go home. And I wish I could say that it was going to be soon," he said.

The latest evacuation orders are among a series in place in the regional district, encompassinga total of 1,026 properties.

Fire fighter crews establishing a control line using a pulaski.
BCWS says 128 firefighters responded to the 10 wildfires burning within the Slocan Lake Complex on Sunday morning. Crews are establishing control lines in areas where heavy machinery can't operate. (B.C. Wildfire Service/Twitter)

According to BCWS, 128 firefighters wereresponding Sunday to the 10 wildfires within the Slocan lake Complex alone, which includes the Ponderosa and Mulvey Creek wildfires, and Aylwin Creek wildfire.

Lunn said the situation feels surreal, and she hopes winds stay calm and rain arrives.

"No matter which way the wind is blowing, it's affecting somebody. So what we need is that rain, the water and calm no winds."

The evacuations came as cool and wet weather helped fight fires in other parts of the province.

A provincewide situation update posted Sunday by theBCWS said risk levels have decreased in other parts of B.C.,reducing fire behaviour on some of other major blazes.

According to the Ministry of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness, 1,800 people and 1,200 properties are under evacuation order across B.C.

With files from Brady Strachan, Akshay Kulkarni and The Canadian Press