
What Manitoba wildfire evacuees should know about insurance coverage
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CTV News
17 minutes ago
- CTV News
Fire again threatens Lytton, B.C., one of hundreds of blazes across Canada
This week marks the fourth anniversary of a deadly wildfire that destroyed the British Columbia village of Lytton, and the community is again under threat, with a nearby out-of-control wildfire setting off evacuation orders and alerts. The Izman Creek fire burning north of Lytton prompted the Thompson-Nicola Regional District to issue an evacuation order for three properties and an evacuation alert for nine addresses along Highway 12 on Tuesday. The Lytton First Nation also issued an evacuation alert for a large area encompassing several of its reserves on the east side of the Fraser River. Village Mayor Denise O'Connor said the timing of the latest wildfire has made it that much more impactful for community members. 'People just couldn't believe that a fire would start on the anniversary,' O'Connor, who became mayor of Lytton a year after the deadly 2021 wildfire, said in an interview Wednesday. 'And there are still many, many people, not just in the village but around the area here, that are still struggling with PTSD from four years ago. 'It's just such a trigger for them ... It's still so real for people here.' The BC Wildfire Service website showed the fire that was discovered Tuesday had grown to 130 hectares by Wednesday afternoon, forcing the closure of the highway for about 60 kilometres as firefighting crews responded by air and on the ground. There are three helicopters assigned to the blaze, which is suspected to have been caused by human activity. The blaze was among more than 480 wildfires burning across Canada on Wednesday, including about 80 active fires in British Columbia. Alexandria Jones with the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre said Canada had been at national preparedness level five, the highest level, since May 29. The designation means wildland fire activity is significant across multiple jurisdictions and all Canadian firefighting resources are engaged in battling the blazes, while international partners are also being called on for help, she said. Jones said the situation across the country is 'severe' and there are still three months ahead in this fire season. 'What is really critical is the area that's burned, how quickly these fires are spreading. And so this year we're already at four million hectares.' While that is about half of the figure for this time in 2023 -- Canada's worst fire season on record -- this year's number is much higher than early July in 2024, 2022, 2021 and 2020. Just over one million hectares had burned at this time last year, Jones said, while just under 190,000 hectares had burned by early July 2022. At this point in 2021, 493,000 hectares had burned. Jones said Canada has received assistance so far from firefighters from the United States, Australia, Mexico and Costa Rica. In B.C., the Thompson-Nicola Regional District had earlier issued a local state of emergency for the Blue Sky Country region due to another nearby wildfire, which was burning out of control before being classified as 'being held' as of Wednesday. About 80 fires are burning in Yukon. The territorial government issued a statement on Wednesday saying crews had made progress containing 'priority fires,' aided by cooler and wetter conditions. The bulletin said the territory was lifting the level two fire restriction that had been issued on June 27 for the Southern Lakes, Tatchun, Northern Tutchone, Klondike and Kluane regions. Normal fire-season burning rules remain in effect. The territory had earlier lifted an evacuation alert for the area surrounding Ethel Lake, a four-hour drive north of Whitehorse. In Saskatchewan, the number of active wildfires has more than tripled in the last week. The province was reporting 64 active fires on Wednesday, with 20 uncontained. There were 20 active fires last week. Marlo Pritchard with the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency told reporters at a virtual news conference that residents of Bear Creek and La Plonge in the province's northwest have been put under evacuation order. He said the agency is supporting more than 200 people who have fled their homes. At the peak of wildfire activity last month, wildfires had forced more than 10,000 Saskatchewan residents out of their homes. In Denare Beach, 650 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon, 218 homes burned down, more than half of the community. The province has said it provided one-time, $500 cheques to evacuees 18 and older at a cost of $5.1 million. In Alberta, firefighting crews were battling more than 70 wildfires, with about 30 per cent of those blazes designated as out of control. Statistics from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre show that about 180 of the fires active across the country on Wednesday were burning out of control. Lytton, about 250 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, is still in the process of rebuilding from a devastating 2021 fire that tore through the community four years ago on Monday, killing two people and wiping out much of the village and part of the Lytton First Nation. It was sparked on June 30, 2021, a day after Lytton set a Canadian temperature record of 49.6 C. O'Connor, the mayor, said there were 210 residents in the village before that fire. 'We have about 100 now in the village, more to come,' she said Wednesday. 'But we're a service centre for 2,500 people around the area that all want the town back and they want the grocery store and they want our medical centre back in the village. 'And we look forward to that day when that's going to happen because the people here are not going anywhere. We're here to stay.' By Brenna Owen With files from Brieanna Charlebois in Vancouver, Curtis Ng in Edmonton and Jeremy Simes in Regina This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.


CBC
27 minutes ago
- CBC
New owner of Canadian North says no immediate changes planned for routes or prices
Social Sharing The new owner of Canadian North says there are no immediate plans to change the routes, frequency or prices of flights. Carmele Peter is president of Winnipeg-based Exchange Income Corporation (EIC), which officially took over Canadian North last month after the transaction was approved by the federal government. Peter said the company will meet with local communities and stakeholders to discuss how to improve the airline. She said there also may be a change to prices at some point, though not right away. "Ultimately, you know, we've had significant increases in, I'll call it aviation inflation. [We'll] see where those flight costs are in relation to pricing and, where there is an economic need, we'll address that," she said. "But we're not looking to do anything immediately — we'll make sure we do our homework." News of the sale was first reported in February, but the sale required approval from the federal Competition Bureau and Transport Canada. Geneviève Chassé, a spokesperson for the Competition Bureau, confirmed in an email that her organization had reviewed the transaction and decided not to challenge it. Chassé said she couldn't provide any details on the decision due to confidentiality. Peter said the bureau looked at whether the acquisition would lessen the number of choices northerners would having when flying, but ultimately determined it wouldn't. EIC owns several aviation companies that operate in northern and remote regions, including Calm Air, Perimeter Aviation, Keewatin Air and Custom Helicopters. Peter said Calm Air currently serves the Kivalliq region in Nunavut, while Canadian North offers similar service to the east and west of that region. "So there was no overlap that existed. So there wasn't going to be a lessening of competition," Peter said. "What you have here is effectively a change of owners, not one less airline." Peter said this situation is different from one that occurred in 2019, when "old Canadian North" and First Air merged. That merger effectively created a monopoly on air travel in Nunavut and the Competition Bureau had flagged several concerns about it. "That obviously was a material difference in that transaction compared to ours," Peter said. "[Here, there's] no elimination of competition, which is I think obviously why the Competition Bureau got comfortable." Competition in the North has been highlighted as a major issue by the Competition Bureau, which recently released a report and recommendations for the federal government. One of them was to encourage more competition in the region, which could lead to lower prices and connect the region to more places.

CTV News
38 minutes ago
- CTV News
Viterra, Bunge $8.2B merger officially completed
Rail cars are seen on the tracks outside the Viterra Cascadia Terminal that handles grain exports, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 12, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck Bunge announced its successful merger with Viterra Limited, forming what they anticipate will be a leading global agribusiness company specializing in food, feed, and fuel. This US$8.2-billion deal was finalized nearly six months after the Canadian government approved the merger, having included specific terms and conditions to address competition concerns. According to a media release, Bunge's CEO, Greg Heckman, stated that this union creates a more robust organization with enhanced capabilities and expertise. Viterra, a grain-handling business formerly known as the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, operates over 80 facilities across Canada. As part of the new structure, former Viterra CEO David Mattiske now serves as Co-Chief Operating Officer on Bunge's Executive Leadership Team. He joins Julio Garros, who previously held the role of Bunge's Co-President of Agribusiness. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 3, 2025.