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SEPTEMBER 2017 • COUNTRY LIFE IN BC


Compensation sought for Clinton backburn debacle


Rancher with permit trapped as fire started


by TAMARA LEIGH CLINTON – A group of


producers is seeking


compensation and an apology for damages caused when the BC Wildfire Service lost control of a prescribed burn on Hart Ridge Mountain, south of Clinton. The blaze quickly escalated and jumped Highway 97, threatening nearby ranches and homes and triggering evacuations and highway closures. Greg Nyman speaks on behalf of the Cariboo & Thompson-Nicola Ranchers and Rural Property Owners group. He was on Hart Ridge Mountain with his cows when the fire started. After hearing that the wildfire centre was planning controlled burns on August 1, he got a permit to enter his range lease to try to move his cattle to safety. “I was liaising with an


agrologist from 100 Mile, and they gave me a four-hour window. I went up at about 8 and was supposed to be off the mountain at noon,” he says.


The prescribed burns were


started while he was on the mountain, cutting off his planned exit and putting him and over 100 head of cattle in harm’s way. Nyman got off the mountain safely but had to leave his cattle behind. In the


end, the fire completely burned his 7,000-hectare range unit. “I haven't found 30 head and I don't know where they are. I am pretty sure they are gone,” says Nyman. “I don't know what my losses are until I get my cows home. I don't even know if our range unit will be viable or not. Might not have anywhere to turn out our cows, and then what? I'm not the only one.” Nyman’s family has ranched south of Clinton since the 1960s. He took over in 1987 and has fought fires in the area off and on for close to 45 years. He is critical of the management approach they have taken. “They’ve relied too much


on backburns and too many of them have gone wrong,” he says. “It’s ineffective fire management. The way they use their resources and tools is not as effective as it used to be. Every year that the Liberals were in power, they cut funding, closed offices, cut staff. I don't think we're making progress; I think it's getting worse.” He’s quick to say that this is not a criticism of the frontline firefighters; it’s the management side that is ineffective. “Communities need to be


involved in fire management. There’s a total disconnect


between the wildfire service and the communities, and they ignore our concerns,” says Nyman. The group of ranchers and


rural property owners started in the Clinton area and has expanded as they have been contacted by producers in other areas who are


struggling with losses due to backburns. “I spoke with a fellow out


by Williams Lake who lost $1.5 million in timber that he was protecting on a backburn. There are so many stories like this,” says Nyman. “... Houses can be insured and rebuilt, but you can't regrow a mature fir forest.” The group would like an apology from government officials for the way Hart Ridge controlled burns were handled and for a general lack of consultation with local residents. They are also calling for compensation for livestock which are lost due to wildfires, as well as rural structures, woodlots, private timber, fields, grazing and fencing. BC Wildfire Service says


producers may qualify for compensation. According to a spokesperson, under the Wildfire Act, “people can be compensated for damage on private land for avoidable damage caused by fire control by government.”


21


A familiar sight to many ranchers in BC’s Cariboo and Chilcotin this year but this plume is from a deliberately set fire. GREG NYMAN PHOTO


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