Sask. sends aircraft, firefighters to help fight B.C. wildfires - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:29 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Sask. sends aircraft, firefighters to help fight B.C. wildfires

The Saskatchewan government is sending 20 firefighters and three aircraft to B.C. to help fight the 220 wildfires burning in that province.

Resources can be called back if hot and dry conditions trigger fires here, says province

A wildfire burns on a mountain near Ashcroft, B.C., on July 7, 2017. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

The Saskatchewan government is sending 20firefighters and three aircraftto British Columbiato help fight the 220 wildfires burning in that province.

The aircraft, along with a wildfire investigation specialist, have already been sent, said Steve Roberts, executive director of Saskatchewan's wildfire management program.

Monday morning, 50 pumps and 2,000 lengths of firefightinghose were sent toChilliwack, B.C.

The firefighters are to be sent Tuesday, along with 16 more wildfire specialist personnel, he said. Their destination is Kamloops, B.C.

Contending with steeper slopes and different vegetation will be among the challenges Saskatchewan's firefighters will have to deal with in B.C. The style of firefighting in B.C. will be different, Roberts said, but all of Saskatchewan's firefighters are trained to meet a national standard.

Wildfires have forced more than 10,000 people from their homes in B.C.'s Interior.

'We had help from everywhere'

Regarding the cost of the assistance, Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall reminded reporters thathis province was on the receiving end of help in2015 when wildfires forced theevacuation ofLaRonge.

"We had help from everywhere," he said.

"We had help from Montana, Colorado, from other provinces.People send help and then worry about some of the financial issues later."

Eventually, the cost for the assistance is to be recovered, Roberts said.

"We agree in advance that British Columbia willcompensate Saskatchewan for the use of thoseaircraft and thosepersonnel."

Fire risk in Sask.

Dispatching help to B.C. will not put Saskatchewan at risk, saidDuaneMcKay, executive director of emergency management and fire safety in Saskatchewan.

"It isn't going to hamper us, simply because of the conditions that exist presently."

"We would not be offering any assistance if there was any risk to Saskatchewan," he added.

The risk of fire in northern Saskatchewan remains low to moderate, while high temperatures have increased the risk in the southern part of the province. (CBC News)

In northern Saskatchewan, a wet fall made for low-hazard conditions in the spring. Throughout the spring, conditions in the North were wet and rainy, leading to few lightning-caused fires and a low risk of fire, Roberts said.

In the south, the threat of fire has been raised by recent high temperatures. However, the number of fire calls has not been more than normal, said McKay.

Saskatchewan currently has only oneactive fire, in the le--la-Crosse area, which is being contained.

Year-to-date, there have been 110 fires in Saskatchewan well belowthe five-year average of308, Roberts said.

Aircraft, Roberts said,can be returnedwithin 48 hours if they are needed in Saskatchewan.

With files from Jennifer Geens