Lytton British Columbia - The Transportation Safety Board (TSB) says new information it received on the suspected source of the fire that
raced through Lytton, potentially involving a freight train has prompted it to launch an investigation.
The board says in a statement the information came as a result of investigations by the RCMP and B.C. Wildfire Service into the cause of the
fire.
The safety board says it is not yet known which rail line is linked to the train in question and neither Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) nor Canadian National
Railway (CN) has filed any occurrence reports related to the Lytton fire.
No cause for the fire that destroyed much of the village and killed two people has been disclosed, although local indigenous leaders say train movement during
drought-like conditions made people anxious.
And some people from the town say there were reports of a freight train spraying sparks from a wheel.
CN has said its trains were not linked to the fire.
CP resumed its service through Lytton on Monday.
On Friday, federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra ordered all train traffic through Lytton to halt for 48 hours effective immediately, while residents are
on escorted tours through the village.
The Thompson-Nicola Regional District organized bus tours for displaced residents Friday, saying that while unescorted entry isn't safe, work has been done to
clear a way to permit taking residents through the area by bus.
Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said fires across B.C. have devastated many communities and families.
"At this critical juncture, it is imperative that we all listen to the voices of indigenous leaders and engage meaningfully on a path forward that
respects their needs and priorities, while ensuring rail safety and security," Miller said in the Transport Canada statement ordering the two-day halt to
trains on tracks between Kamloops and Boston Bar.
More than 200 wildfires are burning in B.C. as a recent heat wave and parched conditions combined to raise the fire risk in many parts of the province to high
or extreme.
Lightning also continued to challenge wildfire crews in the province, but the BC Wildfire Service reported some progress on at least one of the 15 most
threatening fires in the province.
Hundreds of lightning strikes sparked more than half of roughly two dozen new fires recorded across B.C. since Thursday.
But the wildfire service said slightly cooler weather and modest rainfall earlier in the week helped crews build guards around the entire perimeter of a
roughly three-square-kilometre fire that forced evacuation orders and alerts near Durand Lake, southwest of Kamloops.
Strong winds this week near Lytton also spawned a spot fire on the west side of the Fraser River, but the wildfire service said crews responded
aggressively.
It said firefighters, including 40 recently arrived from New Brunswick, are making progress laying guards and protecting buildings along other flanks of the
88-square-kilometre fire that destroyed Lytton.
About 174 fires have been recorded this week, 26 of them in the last two days, the wildfire service said.
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