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Clearwater, B.C., launches its own wildland firefighting team amid ongoing drought

CBC30-03-2025
Fire Department Initial Attack crew will be made up of 6 members
A small community in B.C.'s North Thompson region is launching its own special firefighting team to suppress wildfires that pop over the summer, as the risk of wildfire in such a heavily forested area remains a key concern for residents.
The move comes after the B.C. Wildfire Service pulled initial attack crews from the area several years ago, according to Clearwater Mayor Merlin Blackwell. Now, the B.C. Wildfire Service said, the crews are based in Kamloops, about 126 kilometres south of the community.
This is all well and good, but if a wildfire sparks, a more immediate response may be necessary.
"Clearwater, if you haven't been here, has probably more trees than any town for per acre," Blackwell told CBC's Daybreak Kamloops host Shelley Joyce.
Meanwhile, the snowpack across the province is well below normal, and forecasters are worried an ongoing drought plaguing the province will continue through the summer.
As British Columbians have come to learn, lots of fuel — trees — and dry conditions can spell disaster when it comes to wildfires.
The team, called the Fire Department Initial Attack crew (FDIA), will be made up of six members, according to the district's director of corporate services, Alsid Prime, and they will be used depending on risk, availability and whether B.C. Wildfire crews are involved.
The district expects to spend up to $294,532 on equipment and training, paid out from the Wells Gray Community Forest Reserve Fund.
These are volunteer positions, however, Blackwell said the team will be paid when training or working on a fire.
The district is also adding another person to its two-person FireSmart mitigation crew, which will serve as the wildfire response team during daytime hours in the summer. Those three people, along with a FireSmart Coordinator, will form a four-person team that can respond to wildfires if other FDIA volunteers are busy. That way, there's always someone available to respond to fires, Prime said.
The recruitment process hasn't formally launched — but community members are already showing interest in joining the team and making sure their homes are protected against future fires, Prime said.
They expect to have the team up and running by May.
While Blackwell is happy about the development of the team, he said there are never enough resources when it comes to fighting wildfires in any B.C. community.
"I still want my initial attack crews that were formerly here, based in Clearwater, with B.C. Wildfire Service back," he said.
Blackwell met with Forest Minister Ravi Parmar recently to talk about how teams in Kamloops will support the needs in Clearwater.
He said he wants the FDIA team to be something of a partnership with the province.
In a statement provided to CBC News, Parmar said partnerships with local government are "important" when it comes to wildfire response.
"The B.C. Wildfire Service team constantly monitors conditions, and when the wildfire risk is high — for any community in B.C. — the B.C. Wildfire Service will base more crews, deploy resources, and work with local leaders to ensure that people are kept safe."
Blackwell said he does see a future where B.C. Wildfire crews return to Clearwater on a more permanent basis, but that won't affect the work the local FDIA team is doing.
"I think as time goes on, everybody is acknowledging that the risk is increasing," he said.
"But I think every community like us needs to look at, what is your risk internally and do you have the right equipment for this? If we were in Kamloops and we had six-storey apartment buildings, we'd be buying a lot of ladder trucks. We don't have that risk. We have this risk and we're dealing with this risk right now."
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'Headed in the wrong direction': More B.C. adults, children are going hungry
'Headed in the wrong direction': More B.C. adults, children are going hungry

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time2 days ago

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'Headed in the wrong direction': More B.C. adults, children are going hungry

Union Gospel Mission gave out 150 food hampers per month to low-income families in 2020. This year that number has grown to 680 due to staggering need — but food insecurity is a problem 'everywhere across the province' Hazel Arnold inside UGM Women's and Families Centre in Vancouver. Photo by Arlen Redekop / PNG Hazel Arnold knows a thing or two about feeding a family. She raised 11 children, four of her own and seven nieces and nephews she adopted after her sister died. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors And the 63-year-old is now raising two granddaughters, ages 10 and 16. But feeding young mouths is an increasingly hard thing to do with grocery prices rising and inflation pushing up the cost of nearly everything in a city that's already famous for being expensive. Arnold, like many low-income British Columbians, more frequently turns to charities to help fill her cupboards. For the past couple of years, she has been picking up food hampers from Union Gospel Mission in the Downtown Eastside. 'In the hampers, we get pasta, rice, canned vegetable, canned fruit, spaghetti sauce, mixed vegetables, soups, peanut butter, tuna, baked beans, split peas. Everything is high protein. So, it makes you feel like you're not really chintzing out on your kids,' she said. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'Without that program, I don't know where me and my grandkids would be.' UGM started the food hamper program in 2020 to help Downtown Eastside residents get groceries while social distancing during the early days of the pandemic. It gave away about 150 hampers a month that year, primarily to families. The need for the hampers has grown every year, with more than 330 handed out each month in 2023 and 2024. That has more than doubled this year, with 4,100 distributed by the end of June — or more than 680 a month. 'There's food insecurity, cost-of-living expenses … Raising kids is a lot of money, too,' said UGM spokesperson Nick Wells. 'But food insecurity is not just a Downtown Eastside problem. It is everywhere across the province and further.' Essential reading for hockey fans who eat, sleep, Canucks, repeat. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Visits to food banks across B.C. have nearly doubled since 2019, and one out of every third person who relies on the service is a child, says the organization Food Banks B.C. 'We're still clearly headed in the wrong direction,' said the Food Banks B.C. executive director, Dan Huang-Taylor. 'There is a continued demand for hunger relief services. … British Columbians are going hungry just to get by.' UGM distributes hampers from its Women and Families Centre, where it has a room filled with supplies. 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While living with her two grandchildren in an RV beside Oppenheimer Park, she went to UGM for showers, meals, programs, and to pray for help. 'I was lost. I was completely beside myself because everything that could go wrong went wrong.' Each client can only pick up a UGM hamper once every three months, so Arnold tries to make the food last by, for example, making a big pot of spaghetti sauce and freezing it in small containers. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. For the past nine months, she and her granddaughters have lived in social housing run by a non-profit, paying rent deemed to be 'affordable' compared to Vancouver's prices. But she still finds it prohibitively high. Her income includes welfare, a child supplement and a rent rebate, but after paying $1,875 for rent and her utility bills, she runs out of money for groceries before the end of each month. Having the apartment is better for her grandchildren. 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Photo by Wiseblood The 111 food-distribution agencies that are members of Food Banks B.C. have experienced increased demand in 2025, and at the same time roughly half of them had a 'notable drop' in both food and financial donations this year, Huang-Taylor said. 'You can really start to appreciate how hard it is to sustain the demand for services in those conditions,' he said. 'We're in a cost-of-living crisis. An increasing number of people just cannot keep up with the cost of life's essentials.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Demand is high in rural communities where groceries tend to be more expensive due to transportation costs. In urban centres, help is being sought by a range of people, including residents with high rents and new arrivals to Canada. Read More The top reasons people cite for relying on food banks, Huang-Taylor said, are grocery prices, low wages, and the cost of housing. 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'Headed in the wrong direction': More B.C. adults, children are going hungry
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time2 days ago

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Hazel Arnold knows a thing or two about feeding a family. She raised 11 children, four of her own and seven nieces and nephews she adopted after her sister died. And the 63-year-old is now raising two granddaughters, ages 10 and 16. But feeding young mouths is an increasingly hard thing to do with grocery prices rising and inflation pushing up the cost of nearly everything in a city that's already famous for being expensive. Arnold, like many low-income British Columbians, more frequently turns to charities to help fill her cupboards. For the past couple of years, she has been picking up food hampers from Union Gospel Mission in the Downtown Eastside. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'In the hampers, we get pasta, rice, canned vegetable, canned fruit, spaghetti sauce, mixed vegetables, soups, peanut butter, tuna, baked beans, split peas. Everything is high protein. So, it makes you feel like you're not really chintzing out on your kids,' she said. 'Without that program, I don't know where me and my grandkids would be.' UGM started the food hamper program in 2020 to help Downtown Eastside residents get groceries while social distancing during the early days of the pandemic. It gave away about 150 hampers a month that year, primarily to families. The need for the hampers has grown every year, with more than 330 handed out each month in 2023 and 2024. That has more than doubled this year, with 4,100 distributed by the end of June — or more than 680 a month. 'There's food insecurity, cost-of-living expenses … Raising kids is a lot of money, too,' said UGM spokesperson Nick Wells. 'But food insecurity is not just a Downtown Eastside problem. 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Without that, we'd really have nothing to look forward to. We'd probably slip into a deep depression,' she said. The Métis woman raised 11 kids on a farm in Saskatchewan before she and her partner decided a few years ago to buy a motor home and move to Vancouver. A series of life events, though, including the death of her partner, led to financial challenges and eventually homelessness. While living with her two grandchildren in an RV beside Oppenheimer Park, she went to UGM for showers, meals, programs, and to pray for help. 'I was lost. I was completely beside myself because everything that could go wrong went wrong.' Each client can only pick up a UGM hamper once every three months, so Arnold tries to make the food last by, for example, making a big pot of spaghetti sauce and freezing it in small containers. For the past nine months, she and her granddaughters have lived in social housing run by a non-profit, paying rent deemed to be 'affordable' compared to Vancouver's prices. But she still finds it prohibitively high. Her income includes welfare, a child supplement and a rent rebate, but after paying $1,875 for rent and her utility bills, she runs out of money for groceries before the end of each month. Having the apartment is better for her grandchildren. But financially, she said bluntly, 'I was better off homeless.' 'It's really hard to budget when there's nothing to budget with,' she said. 'It's sad.' UGM's Wells knows there is a clear need for more food hampers, so someone like Arnold can get one more than once every three months. But the non-profit is doing what it can, he said, with its limited funding and supplies. It spends about $10,000 a month on food hampers, primarily funded through donations . Food insecurity, he argued, 'needs to be urgently addressed by all levels of government.' While the province and Ottawa have pledged support for school meal programs , other ways to access healthy food must also be funded — especially in the summer when kids are not in class, Wells said. Meaningful change, Wells said, includes governments building more affordable housing, so families have more money to spend on groceries. 'One in three kids across the country are going hungry or not sure where their next meals may come from. That's a huge stress for the kids. That's a huge stress for the parents too — dealing with that kind of emotional baggage of 'How do I provide for my family?'' The hampers help to address the intergenerational trauma of parents who grew up without enough to eat and now worry how they will feed their own children, Wells added. At the Greater Vancouver Food Bank, 4,800 children were registered as clients between October and December, 2024. From January to March of this year, the most recent statistics available, that jumped by 20 per cent to 5,800 children, said communications manager Taylor McLean. The 111 food-distribution agencies that are members of Food Banks B.C. have experienced increased demand in 2025, and at the same time roughly half of them had a 'notable drop' in both food and financial donations this year, Huang-Taylor said. 'You can really start to appreciate how hard it is to sustain the demand for services in those conditions,' he said. 'We're in a cost-of-living crisis. An increasing number of people just cannot keep up with the cost of life's essentials.' Demand is high in rural communities where groceries tend to be more expensive due to transportation costs. In urban centres, help is being sought by a range of people, including residents with high rents and new arrivals to Canada. The top reasons people cite for relying on food banks, Huang-Taylor said, are grocery prices, low wages, and the cost of housing. Families and the working poor are among the fastest-growing client groups, as they will often cut their food budget so they can pay other bills. 'The profile of the food bank user has changed,' he said. 'The people who need to access services are our co-workers, friends and family.' Solutions, Huang-Taylor said, include the province improving social assistance rates and disability benefits, and boosting the minimum wage to a living wage; municipalities having more community gardens so people can grow food; and citizens and corporations continuing to donate to food banks. lculbert@

B.C. woman plans to enjoy retirement, travel after $500K lottery win
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