More evacuation orders, alerts as St. Mary's River wildfire more than triples in size within 24 hours - Action News
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British Columbia

More evacuation orders, alerts as St. Mary's River wildfire more than triples in size within 24 hours

An evacuation order has been expanded and an evacuation alert has been issued for multiple homes in southeastern B.C., as the St. Mary's Riverwildfirecontinues to rage out of control.

Blaze expands to cover an area of 26 sq. km as of Thursday afternoon

Beige wildfire smoke rises from a fire on a flat, rural area.
Smoke from the St. Mary's River wildfire is seen in an undated photo. The fire had tripled in size as of Thursday afternoon. (Supplied by the B.C. Wildfire Service)

The St. Mary's River wildfire raging out of control north of Cranbrook, B.C., grew substantially on Thursday.

According to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS), as ofThursday afternoon, the fire had expanded to coveran area of 26square kilometres, more than triple the 8.5 kilometres estimated on Wednesday. It was three square kilometres in size when it was first detected on Monday.

Late Wednesday, the growing wildfire prompted the Regional District of East Kootenay (RDEK) to issue an evacuation order for 15 properties northof the aqam Community in the Woods Corner East area near Cranbrook, including a number that had been on alert since early Tuesday morning.

The district issued a state of local emergency for its Electoral Area E,which includes areas under the evacuation order. It alsoexpanded its evacuation alert to cover nine properties in theWoods Corner West area.

Early Thursday evening, the district issued an area restriction order for the vicinity of the St. Mary's River wildfire, prohibiting anyone from staying in or entering the area about 12 kilometres northeast of Cranbrookexcept with permission from the province.

The district said gusting late-day winds, increased fire behaviour and growth prompted the alerts and orders.

An evacuation order means residents should leave immediately, whereas an evacuation alert means residents should prepare to evacuate their homes with little to no notice.

BCWS spokesperson Cliff Chapman said at a news conference Thursday that the situation with the St. Mary's River wildfire is going to be challenging over the next few days.

"Our fuel conditions are as dry as we've ever seen them, and that goes from the surface layer fuel, the quick, fast-burning fuels, the grass and the moss all the way to the large standing timber," he said.

Earlier Wednesday, Nasukin (Chief) Joe Pierre Jr. of the aqam Community, a member of the Ktunaxa First Nation, said seven homes had been lost to wildfire.

Since its discovery on Monday, the St. Mary's River wildfire has displaced about 95 members of the Indigenous community, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS).

WATCH | aqam chief denounces 'bogus' GoFundMe campaigns for St. Mary's River wildfire evacuees:

aqam chief calls out 'bogus' fundraising campaigns

1 year ago
Duration 2:14
'There are folks out there who are trying to take advantage of this situation,' said Joe Pierre of fundraising efforts purporting to be for people affected by the St. Mary's River wildfire.

The RDEK issued an evacuation order on Monday for 52 homes, along with an evacuation alert for 43 properties in Fort Steele, a small town near aqam, about 10kilometres northeast of Cranbrook's city limits.

The fire has caused the failure of Fort Steele's water treatment facility one of the properties under evacuation alertpromptingInterior Health to issue a boil water advisory which could affect up to 5,000 residents.

Wildfire fight set to move south

The BCWS classifies the St. Mary's River wildfire as a "wildfire of note," meaning it is highly visible or poses a potential threat to public safety.

There are currently 23 wildfires of note burning across the province, most of them located in central and northern regions.

Chapman says B.C.'s wildfire fight is set to move towardthe province's more populated southern areas, including Cranbrook,amid hot and windy weather, while cooler temperatures and rain are expected to bring some relief in scorched northern regions.

Environment Canada forecasts showers from Friday until next Wednesday in Fort Nelson, the northern community where firefighters have been battling the massive Donnie Creek wildfire, the largest blaze in B.C.'s history now covering more than5,832 square kilometres.

However, Cranbrook isforecastto receive only showers on Friday, while the rest of the weekend and next week is forecast to remain hot and dry.

With files from Dirk Meissner of The Canadian Press