Sudbury

Premier Doug Ford visits Britt Command Centre, thanks team battling Parry Sound 33

Premier Doug Ford was in Britt, Ont., Friday afternoon to visit the command centre set up for emergency personnel working to supress the forest fire known as Parry Sound 33, south of Sudbury.

Doug Ford praised fire rangers for their work battling forest fires all across Ontario

Parry Sound-Muskoka MPP Norm Miller, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry Jeff Yurek (far right) speak with the head of the Incident Management Team for the forest fire known as Parry Sound 33. (Twitter/ fordnation)

The Premier was in Britt, Ont., Friday afternoon to visit the command centre set up for emergency personnel working to suppress the forest fire known as Parry Sound 33.

That fire, 90 kilometres south of Sudbury, near the Key River, is still not under control.

As of Friday afternoon it had burned 7,297 hectares of land.

Doug Ford was accompanied by Natural Resources and Forestry Minister Jeff Yurek and Parry Sound-Muskoka MPP Norm Miller.

The visit was unannounced and media was not notified of the plans.

A news release issued by the provincial government, said that Ford also met with people in the affected communities, as well as the teams fighting the fires and managing the evacuation process.

"It's a terrible thing to have to flee your home because of a forest fire," Ford said in the release.

"These fires have shown how communities in Ontario come together in times of need."

During his visit Friday to the Command Centre set up in Britt, Premier Doug Ford thanked "the men and women from near and far for helping us respond to this emergency." (Twitter/fordnation)

Ford also thanked the fire rangers from Ontario and elsewhere for their efforts to battle the forest fires all across the province.

 "I am grateful to the premiers of provinces that are helping Ontario, as well as leaders in the U.S. and Mexico who are providing assistance. We are working side by side as one united community," he said in the release.

There are 90 firefighters working to suppress Parry Sound 33 specifically, including a crew from Mexico that arrived on Wednesday.

As of July 26, the MNRF says there were 45 active forest fires in northeastern Ontario. Fifteen are not under control yet.

"Our government is doing everything we can to bring these fires under control and keep you safe," said Ford.