Wildfires spark evacuation order for dozens of homes, state of emergency near Fort St. John

Two wildfires in northern B.C. merged Thursday night, state of emergency declared

Image | Alaska highway fire

Caption: A fire near Fort St. John, B.C., shut down the Alaska Highway Thursday afternoon. It was reopened Thursday night, though a travel advisory remains in effect. (Paul Walter)

An evacuation order has been issued(external link) for about 45 homes near the Alaska Highway in northeastern British Columbia because of wildfires in the area.
A fire information officer with the Peace River Regional District says the order is in effect for the Mile 80 area of the Alaska Highway, near Stoddard Road, and the Shepherds Inn area.
Anyone in those areas must leave immediately and register at the North Peace Arena reception centre in Fort St John.
There are also several evacuation alerts(external link) in the area — meaning residents should be prepared to leave on short notice.

Image | alaska highway evacuation order

Caption: The evacuation order for Mile 80 of the Alaska Highway, north of Fort St John, B.C. (PRRD)

State of emergency

British Columbia's Peace River Regional District has declared a state of emergency due to aggressive wildfires near Fort St. John.
The state of emergency was issued for the Electoral Area B region(external link), an 86,000 square kilometre area that encompasses several towns and First Nations reserves in northeastern B.C.

Image | alaska highway

Caption: The Beaton Airport Road wildfire jumped the Alaska Highway this week. (Paul Walter)

Two fires merge

On Thursday, a fire that broke out the day before in the Mile 80 area on the Alaska highway merged with the much larger 9,500 hectare Beatton Airport Road fire that has been burning for more than two weeks.
The provincial government says 106 firefighters and five helicopters are working to contain the fire, with the support of air tankers.
There are 40 active fires burning in northern B.C., most of them in the Peace River Regional District, as of Friday morning.

Alaska highway travel advisory

The Alaska Highway has partially reopened following a temporary closure Thursday afternoon, but a travel advisory is in effect because of nearby wildfires in northeastern B.C.
DriveBC(external link) says smoke is causing reduced visibility on the four-kilometre stretch of highway about 45 kilometres north of Fort St John. Drivers are being urged to proceed carefully.
The Peace River Regional District says piloted traffic is allowed through and traffic controls are in place.
The B.C. Wildfire Service(external link) said the situation is likely to change throughout the night and the highway could close again on short notice.
The Beatton River Airport 151 Road is still closed, said the regional district, but the Aitken Creek Road has been reopened.
Highway 37 is also open to connect B.C. to Yukon and Alaska.
With files from Betsy Trumpener(external link), Stephanie Mercier

Image | Fort St. John fire

Caption: A smaller wildfire near Fort St. John, B.C., merged with a larger one on Thursday. (Trevor Matheson/Twitter)