Dwindling Fire Smart dollars concerning
PRINCE GEORGE – Each year at this time, civic officials start to the work of preparing Northerners for wildfires. FireSmart BC, originated in 1990 as an initiative to manage wildland-urban interface risks, designed to increase wildfire resilience through education, mitigation, and community planning.
“Fire Smart is really a program, led by communities, where we’re trying to get the word out to let people know what the things that they can do in and around their own home and property to, make it more resilient to a wildfire,” explains Tanya Spooner, Manager of Emergency Programs for the City. “So there’s things that you can do, immediately around your home in that first meter and a half, all the way up to about 30 metres out.”
And every year, training of emergency response gets underway good and early. Since Fire Smart’s inception, there has been funding in the budget to do it. But the most recent provincial budget essentially revealed the the funding pot is dry, and allocated $15 million as a reprieve. Very concerning for the chair of the Regional District.
