B.C. First Nations carry huge debts after fighting to save homes from wildfires
VANCOUVER — Chief Larry Nooski remembers the deafening sound of a wildfire racing toward Nadleh Whut’en territory in August, like a “low-level jet plane.”
The chief of the central British Columbia First Nation felt ambushed. His community scrambled to buy equipment, train firefighters, evacuate residents and set up an emergency operations centre — spending about $400,000 but saving most of the reserve’s buildings from the flames.
He said the province’s emergency management agency assured him it would co-ordinate reimbursement from various provincial, federal and non-governmental agencies. Months later, he’s still waiting.
“We are able to carry this debt, but we shouldn’t have to,” Nooski said. “My worry is more (about) those smaller communities that have to go through these emergencies and make those expenditures and are not able to carry the debts.”