Winds fan flames in fire-stricken B.C., Williams Lake latest city to face evacuation - Action News
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British Columbia

Winds fan flames in fire-stricken B.C., Williams Lake latest city to face evacuation

The number of people in B.C. who have been forced from their homes due to spreading wildfires has taken a huge jump, after a few days of relative calm, new weather conditions are fanning flames.

7 new evacuation orders, multiple new evacuation alerts since Friday as fires continue to burn

Residents in Williams Lake line-up to get gasoline in smokey conditions in the days leading up to the evacuation order. Officials estimate up to half of the city left before that order came. (Simon Hergott)

Williams Lake, B.C., is the latest city in the province to face an evacuation order due to wildfires.

The order came around 6 p.m. PT Saturday as officials spent the day monitoring strengthening winds.

Around 24,000 people live in Williams Lake and its surrounding areas, but at least 50 per cent of those people have already leftin the past week.

Earlier Saturday, the province estimatedmore than 17,400 have been evacuated from residences. Many have relocated to evacuation centres set up in Prince George and Kamloops.

Officials have set up around 700 cots at the Sandman Centre in Kamloops to provide shelter for Williams Lake B.C. residents fleeing wildfires there. (Bob Keating/CBC)

Fire officials warned conditions would worsenas a forecasted cold front brings gusting winds and the potential for lightning strikes.

There are seven new evacuation orders now in B.C., whilemultiple new evacuation alerts have been issued since Friday, all in the Central Interior.

The evacuation orders are for:

  • Williams Lake
  • Loon Lake, near Ashcroft.
  • Big Creek, west of 100 Mile House.
  • The Clisbako area, southwest of Prince George.
  • A rural area near McCarthy Lake.
  • Rural areas around 150 Mile House, Moffat Creek and Polley Lake.
  • A rural area east of Clinton B.C. and 70 Mile House
Flames shoot out of a home in B.C.'s Lake Country on July 15, 2017. (Owen Williamson)

Up to 150 homes were also evacuated by officials going door to door in Lake Country, B.C., near Kelowna after grass fire caught and spread Saturday afternoon.

The village of Clinton is on an evacuation alert, while an evacuation order was issued late Saturday for some rural properties east of Clinton and 70 Mile House.

Winds and lightning

The B.C. Wildfire Service reported 161 wildfires burning in the province on Saturday at midday, including 14 that pose a threat to structures.

That's down from the more than 200 that were burning last weekend, but the weather forecast means more could be coming.

Water bombers fly over Williams Lake, B.C., to refill on Friday. (Nadine Overhoff)

Environment Canada forecasted winds of up to 50 km/h across the Interior, to begin Saturday afternoon as a cold front moves through the region.

"We're keeping a close eye on it," said B.C. Wildfire Service spokesperson Kevin Skrepnek."We're especially concerned with what this wind is going to do with the fires."

A helicopter circles the Little Fort fire, dumping buckets of water in an effort to contain the flames from spreading. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

That's bad news for fire crews, as the winds could cause fires to spread farther. Some lightning is also expected, which could spark new fires.

Skrepnek said crews have had success in conducting controlled burns in the past few days near Williams Lake, 150 Mile House and 100 Mile House in anticipation but with evacuation orders now in place for all three places, it's unclear how successful they were.

Skrepnek said strong wind will cause fires, or any new ones to grow, "quite aggressively."

Passersby stop at a gas station to watch the fires burning in Little Fort on Friday. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Numerous other evacuation orders, alerts and road closures remain in effect across the province.Air quality alerts are in effect across the Interior due to smoke from the fires.

The province says there have been no major issues getting supplies to non-fire affected municipalities, but Canadian Forces air assets may need to be used for supply drops to two First Nations in the Chilcootin area that have been cut off from supply lines by fires.

The Ashcroft fire has already caused significant damage on the Ashcroft Indian Band reserve. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

With files from Meera Bains and CBC News Network.