Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Smoky skies for most of B.C. as wildfires rage; capital-area health risk 'very high'

The thick smoke blanketing Vancouver Island and much of the province grounded firefighting helicopters trying to dampen the 90-hectare wildfire burning on a steep slope in Zeballos on Monday.
VKA-haze-1149.jpg
By early afternoon, air quality in Victoria/Saanich deteriorated to a "very high" health risk of 10+, the most serious rating according to the B.C. government's air quality index.

The thick smoke blanketing Vancouver Island and much of the province grounded firefighting helicopters trying to dampen the 90-hectare wildfire burning on a steep slope in Zeballos on Monday.

That smoke, created by wildfires burning in the province, also contributed to poor air quality across Vancouver Island and created limited visibility that forced Harbour Air to cancel most of its afternoon flights.

In Zeballos, the twin-engine heavy-lift helicopter that spent the weekend spraying a heavy mist over the Gold Valley Main fire was unable to fly Monday morning because of the heavy smoke, said Lynne Wheeler, public information officer for the Coastal Fire Service.

The steep terrain makes it unsafe for firefighting on the ground so on Monday, firefighters focused on dampening the structures and homes closest to the fire line, Wheeler said. The fire is moving up the hill, away from the village, “which is great news,” Wheeler said.

It’s unclear when the Sikorsky Skycrane will be able to resume firefighting operations.

“It's going to have to burn itself out when it rains so it could be going for a while,” Wheeler said.

An evacuation order, which affects six homes on the east side of the village, remains in effect.

The wildfire in Zeballos is one of 560 wildfires burning across B.C., all of which have contributed to poor air quality.

As of Monday afternoon, the air quality was rated at a high to very high health risk at all Vancouver Island monitoring stations.

The air in Nanaimo/Parksville, Victoria/Saanich, West Shore and Duncan poses a “very high” health risk, with the most serious rating of 10+ according to the B.C. government’s air quality index. The rating means there are high concentrations of fine particulate matter in the air, according to Environment Canada, which extended its smoky skies bulletin for Vancouver Island and most of the province.

Dr. Paul Hasselback, the medical health officer for central Vancouver Island, said much of the province is under a single high-pressure system that has trapped the smoke in place.

“Here on the island, we've had smoke before but typically those events have been a couple [of] days and blown out, quite literally,” he said. In this case, the smoky skies have lingered for about a week.

Vancouver Islanders are used to breathing some of the best-quality air globally, Hasselback said, which is why the heavy haze may cause alarm. But he reminded people to spare a thought for residents in the Okanagan, Williams Lake and Prince George, where the smoke is so thick, the days look like night.

Air quality this poor likely means most Vancouver Islanders will experience some health impacts, Hasselback said.

That could range from itchy eyes and a scratchy throat to more severe symptoms for anyone with respiratory or cardiac health conditions, the elderly and children.

“All of us will feel symptoms at some point,” Hasselback said. “The early symptoms are irritation in the eyes, runny nose, headache.”

Anyone at higher risk is advised to stay indoors or avoid strenuous outdoor activities.

Several day cares across Nanaimo reported that they kept their kids indoors due to the poor air quality

Debra Tuck, president of the Nanaimo chapter of Cystic Fibrosis Canada, said her son, Evan, who has the genetic disease, was unable to complete his run on Sunday because of the thick smoke.

Evan Tuck, 29, was halfway up Mount Benson, nine kilometres west of Nanaimo, when he was overcome with a coughing fit, Debra Tuck said. He coughed so hard, he vomited.

Debra Tuck said she can typically see Mount Benson from her home but now the visibility is so poor, the mountain has disappeared from view.

Smoky conditions have put B.C. on the map for some of the worst air quality in the world. The World Air Quality Index lists the air quality in most of B.C. as “unhealthy” and the air in Crofton and Nanaimo is listed as “very unhealthy.” According to the world index, Crofton’s air quality is worse than that of Dazhou, China.

[email protected]