Lytton, B.C., officials ‘immediately overwhelmed’ by wildfire rebuild, auditor says
The British Columbia government expected the small Village of Lytton to lead its own recovery from the wildfire that destroyed most of the community and killed two people in June 2021, a report from the office of the province’s auditor said.
But the report said officials with the village in B.C.’s southern Interior were “immediately overwhelmed by the magnitude of devastation” wrought by the fire and lacked the necessary staff and funds, prompting the province to step in.
Still, it said the B.C. government itself didn’t have a comprehensive legal framework to guide disaster recovery at the time, and its laws and policies were “not sufficient to guide the complex and unprecedented recovery of a whole community.”
In Lytton, most residents were “uninsured or underinsured” for fire damages, noted the report issued Tuesday by the office of Auditor General Bridget Parrish.
