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Additional RCMP officers and power generators are being sent to Fort Nelson, B.C., as a community-wide evacuation enters its second week.
More than 4,700 people were ordered to leave the community on May 10 as the fast-growing Parker Lake wildfire, sparked by a downed tree hitting a powerline, moved toward the community.
Rain and cooler temperatures have helped firefighters battle the flames in recent days, but officials say it’s still too soon to guess when residents will be allowed to return.
“There’s not a lot of sense in bringing people back for just a couple of days and then asking them all to leave again,” regional Mayor Rob Fraser said in an interview with CBC News on Thursday, noting that flames are still within 2.5 kilometres of the community.
In the meantime, extra resources are being sent to help secure Fort Nelson, which is in the province’s far northeast, about 1,000 kilometres north of Vancouver and about 800 kilometres northwest of Edmonton.
On Thursday, RCMP confirmed they have sent additional officers to patrol the community and outlying areas, including the Fort Nelson First Nation and Prophet River First Nations, to ensure homes and businesses are secure.
There have been reports of looters taking advantage of the emptied town. RCMP told CBC News on Monday that they have made arrests in connection to property crimes, but have yet to provide more details.
At a community meeting held Wednesday, Fraser, who has remained in Fort Nelson, said he he has seen a strong police presence and not witnessed any damage to businesses, adding he is confident that if there have been crimes, “the usual suspects will be dealt with.”
In addition to extra police, B.C. Hydro said Thursday it is sending backup generators to Fort Nelson to ensure a steady power supply.
The utility said it had cut power to roughly 100 customers northwest of the community at the request of the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS), with plans to restore it as soon as possible.
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It also said that while power remains on for the rest of Fort Nelson, a transmission line has been damaged by wildfires, and the gas processing plant that powers its local generating facility has been shut down as a precaution.
With all that in play, the service said it is sending emergency mobile generating units to Fort Nelson to ensure a lack of power does not become an issue for crews or other essential services still in the region.
‘Excellent’ conditions for fire crews
In a video update posted late Thursday, the BCWS shared a positive message after a day of rain and even some snow in the Fort Nelson region.
BCWS fire behaviour specialist Evan Peck said a low-pressure system had brought much-needed rain over the last two days along with cooler temperatures and lower humidity, making for “excellent” conditions for fire suppression efforts.
In a video released by the service, Peck says there has been minimal growth of the Parker Lake fire, which was mapped at 123 square kilometres in size as of late Thursday.
Peck says the weather has also dampened the much larger Patry Creek fire, a holdover blaze from last year that’s burning as close as 25 kilometres north of Fort Nelson.
Peck says conditions should remain favourable over the next several days.
However, he said it’s not enough to break the long-term drought in northeastern B.C., which has been experiencing low precipitation and parched land since last year.
The wildfire service is in the process of setting up a fire camp at the Fort Nelson airport, as crews dig in for the long haul to get the fires under control.
B.C. officials, including Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma, are expected to provide a wildfire update at 1 p.m. PT Friday. The update will be broadcast on cbc.ca/bc and CBC Gem.