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Local emergency declared over B.C. fire that shut highway as evacuation orders expand

CHILLIWACK — Three British Columbia wildfires, including a blaze that forced the closure of the Coquihalla Highway, have prompted local officials to issue new evacuation orders.
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Smoke from the Mine Creek wildfire burning between Hope and Merritt, B.C., is seen in this handout photo, on Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout- BC Wildfire Service (Mandatory Credit)

CHILLIWACK — Three British Columbia wildfires, including a blaze that forced the closure of the Coquihalla Highway, have prompted local officials to issue new evacuation orders.

The Fraser Valley Regional District says it has declared a state of local emergency and issued an evacuation order for the Coquihalla Lakes Lodge and the Coquihalla Summit Snowmobile Club site due to the Mine Creek fire that shut the highway on Wednesday.

Traffic between the Lower Mainland and the B.C. Interior has been further disrupted with a vehicle crash closing Highway 1 just north of Hope, leaving Highway 3 as the only main road route eastward.

The 19-square-kilometre Mine Creek fire had already triggered an evacuation order and other alerts from the Thompson-Nicola Regional District for properties along the highway.

Two fires have also triggered evacuation orders from the Cariboo Regional District and the Ulkatcho First Nation for areas around Anahim Lake, Nimpo Lake and Charlotte Lake.

The BC Wildfire Service says in an update that a low-pressure system moving into the province from the Pacific in the next 48 hours may help clear wildfire smoke covering most of the province, but could also spark new ignitions from lightning strikes.

In the meantime, the service says above-seasonal temperatures will continue, and the pervasive smoke is likely to disrupt use of firefighting aircraft.

The evacuation orders in the Cariboo Regional District have been prompted by the 93-square-kilometre Beef Trail Creek wildfire and the Dusty Lake fire that has grown to around 45 square kilometres.

Evacuees have been told to leave immediately and head east along Highway 20 to Williams Lake where they can register and get help at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex.

Parts of B.C. remain under heat warnings and special air-quality statements, with Environment Canada warning "numerous regions" are likely to be impacted by smoke over the next day or two.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2025.

The Canadian Press