B.C. wildfires near Fort St. John spark evacuations
A thousand people forced out and thousands more on alert
About 1,000 people have been ordered to leave their homes in northeastern B.C., as one of the province's biggest wildfires forced a new evacuation order and a dramatic expansion of an evacuation alert zone.
As the Beatton Airport Road fire grew to 12,000 hectares, 500 people were told to leave their rural homes immediately.
Another 500 people in the nearby Blueberry River First Nation are also leaving.
Meanwhile, the evacuation alert zone has expanded dramatically.
About 5,000 people living along a 40-kilometre stretch of the Alaska Highway are being told to be ready to leave at a moment's notice.
On Friday afternoon, the expanded evacuation alert zone stretched from Mile 85 of the Alaska Highway all the way down through Charlie Lake to just north of Fort St John.
An emergency reception centre has been set up in Fort St John.
"We've got some pretty active fires going right now," said Shannon Anderson, emergency operations centre director for the Peace River Regional District. "It's something we haven't seen in our area for quite some time."
On Thursday, the fire was about 45 kilometres north of Fort St. John, at Mile 80 on the Alaska Highway.
On Friday, the fire jumped the Alaska Highway and continued to grow.
A travel advisory for the Alaska Highway remains in effect and a smoke advisory has been issued for the North Peace.
Siphon Creek evacuation
A new evacuation order was also issued Friday for 11 homes in Siphon Creek, about 90 kilometres northeast of Fort St. John. An evacuation alert was also expanded.
The Siphon Creek fire now covers about 17,000 hectares.
On Thursday it had covered 9,000 hectares and was set to cross into Alberta.
This fire is now the largest in the province.
State of emergency
As of Friday, there are 36 active fires burning in northern B.C., most of them in the Peace River Regional District.
B.C.'s Peace River Regional District has declared a state of emergency because of the aggressive wildfires.