Fire evacuations lifted for Canada's Waterton Lakes park | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Fire evacuations lifted for Canada's Waterton Lakes park

FILE - In this Sunday, Aug. 12, 2018 file photo provided by the National Park Service, people walk along the shore near Lake McDonald Lodge as the Howe Ridge Fire burns in Glacier National Park, Mont. Wildfires that have kept portions of Glacier National Park closed for two weeks are scrambling visitors’ plans and prompting some to cancel their trips. Much of Glacier’s famous Going-to-the-Sun-Road has been closed since August 12 due to a fire that’s burned more than 19 square miles (50 square kilometers). (National Park Service via AP, File)
Original Publication Date August 27, 2018 - 9:56 AM

HELENA, Mont. - Much-needed rain fell across Montana on Monday and slowed the spread of a fire burning near the U.S.-Canada border enough for Canadian officials to lift an evacuation order issued last week for Waterton Lakes National Park.

The rain has suppressed but not extinguished the 3-square-mile (8-square-kilometre) blaze burning in the northern part of Glacier National Park and threatening Waterton Lakes a year after another fire swept through the Alberta park.

"They got almost 3/4 of an inch of rain over the last 24 (hours) ... into early this morning," said Rocky Gilbert, the operations chief for Southwest Incident Management Team leading the firefighting efforts, in a video update Monday morning. "Hopefully things will be looking pretty good up on that fire with the rainfall."

Parks Canada officials said in a statement Monday that most of last week's closures have been lifted for Waterton park's trails, backcountry campgrounds and waterways.

It was the second consecutive year the park has been evacuated because of fire. A 2017 blaze burned over much of the park, destroying infrastructure and affecting more than 80 per cent of its trails.

The rain also slowed another fire burning in Glacier near Lake McDonald that previously destroyed 14 residences and 13 other structures. Evacuation orders there remain in place and officials said Monday there is the possibility of wind-driven fire activity later this week when drier weather arrives.

Crews fighting fires across the state similarly reported rain from the weekend holding the blazes in check.

The rain was expected to continue through Monday night, with snow forecast for elevations above 6,000 feet (1,830 metres) in Glacier National Park and in western Montana, according to the National Weather Service.

Between 1 and 4 inches (2.5 centimetres and 10 centimetres) of snow could fall in the mountains, and up to 10 inches (25 centimetres) could fall on the highest peaks near the Canadian border.

Approximately 950 fires have burned 106 square miles (274 square kilometres) so far this year in Montana, which is just 5 per cent of the land that burned across the state in last year's record-setting season.

News from © The Associated Press, 2018
The Associated Press

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