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Cultural burning: Could more fires be the solution to B.C.'s wildfire problem?

Ron Ignace was almost too young to remember the 鈥渃ool fires.

Ron Ignace was almost too young to remember the 鈥渃ool fires.鈥

Raised by his great-grandparents in Deadman鈥檚 Creek Valley outside Kamloops, he recalls his great-grandfather setting up a piece of glass in the mountains to magnify the power of the sun and spark a blaze.

鈥淗e set it up and rode his horse away,鈥 says Ignace, the former chief of the Skeetchestn Indian Band, recounting the old family story.

鈥淲hat you鈥檙e doing is singeing off the old grass, the dead grass from last year, and putting carbon into the ground, and the black soot attracts the heat from the sun and germinates the plants.鈥

In fact, Indigenous communities have used fire for thousands of years to 鈥済arden鈥 forests in a process also known as 鈥渃ultural burning.鈥

Some communities would burn on a mountain in soil left moist by a retreating snowline, the charred earth stimulating the growth of berry patches or medicinal plants. Others would set fire to the land to open up clogged waterways for spawning salmon or clear foraging areas for moose and deer. The net effect, according to oral histories and forest ecologists, was to suppress mega-fires with low-intensity burns.

On the heels of a record-breaking heat wave that scorched B.C. in a 鈥渇lash drought,鈥 hundreds of fires have exploded across the province 鈥 none more visible than in Lytton, where wildfire devastated the town only a day after it set Canada鈥檚 all-time temperature record of 49.6 C. Climate experts say the 鈥渉eat dome鈥 was made 150 times more likely because of climate change, and such heat waves are expected to regularly return as soon as 2040, making tinderbox conditions even worse.

B.C.鈥檚 forests contain 鈥渋mmense quantities of fuel,鈥 according to a white paper recently published by a number of wildfire researchers.

For Indigenous firekeepers like Ignace, cultural burnings offer a solution to the fire problem that has gathered in deadly force for more than a century.

It鈥檚 time, he says, for the province to fight fire with fire 鈥 on a grand scale.

FIRE SCARS

On a spring or fall morning, winds blow from the south up Ignace鈥檚 10-acre property. That鈥檚 when he and his wife, Marianne, drop a match. The fire walks slowly up the valley, singeing dead vegetation. In the afternoon, the winds shift to the north and the firekeeper triggers a blaze at the other end of the valley.

If you time it right, he says, the two fires collide and put each other out.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very straightforward. There鈥檚 no mystery to it,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut you have to know the climate, you have to know the winds.鈥

Ignace says the 15-year 鈥渆xperiment鈥 has brought back two keystone species 鈥 the yellow bell and biscuit root, which are important medicine and food plants that haven鈥檛 been seen in the area for up to 100 years.

At the same time, Ignace says the forests outside the reserve, where 鈥渃ool burning鈥 is effectively prohibited, have become 鈥渢otally denuded鈥 of biodiversity. Tree species like poplars and birch that once made up a diverse ecosystem but were regarded as 鈥渏unk wood鈥 have been largely replaced by pine.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e all growing at the same speed, there鈥檚 nothing to break it up,鈥 says Amy Cardinal Christianson, a fire research scientist with the 91原创 Forest Service. 鈥淚t just rips through and keeps burning.鈥

Christianson says the rise of B.C.鈥檚 summer 鈥渉ot fires鈥 is linked to the removal of First Nations from their traditional territories.

The 1862 smallpox epidemic killed an estimated 20 million Indigenous people in the 91原创 Northwest. The almost unimaginable human toll, likened by many to genocide, was echoed in the natural world. As Ignace puts it, with people no longer on the land to manage fire, 鈥渁ll hell broke loose.鈥

鈥淭hat鈥檚 when the accidental, the hot wildfires increased,鈥 he says.

Oral histories of 鈥渃ultural burning鈥 passed down to firekeepers like Ignace have been increasingly vindicated by science.

Lori Daniels, a forest ecologist at the University of B.C., has spent years tracing the scars of fire over swaths of Interior forest. Her work drilling tree-core samples has exposed what Ignace and many other Indigenous burners have suspected for generations: Pre-colonial forest fires would burn more often, but at low intensities and rarely in the summer months when they were at their most destructive.

鈥淭hose fires stopped in the late 1800s. We see the timing when they stopped is when European settlers arrived. Also, when Europeans made it illegal for people to burn,鈥 says Daniels. 鈥淭he whole concept is that fire is bad, and that [trees] were resources that were used to drive the economy.鈥

The Bush Fire Act of 1874 set in motion a series of pieces of provincial legislation that effectively banned off-reserve cultural burning and favoured putting out fire at any cost. After the Second World War, new technology and a growing workforce supercharged wildfire suppression, says Daniels.

It was not long after that that Ignace鈥檚 great-grandfather stopped burning altogether, he says.

Ignace attended the Kamloops Indian Residential School for several years, where he says his aunt died and where about 200 burial sites were found in May. At 16, Ignace fled the school 80 kilometres north to hide with another aunt.

鈥淚 went north because I knew they鈥檇 come west to [the] Skeetchesn reserve to look for me,鈥 he says.

For the next six years, Ignace worked in sawmills, railways and apple orchards before returning to school, first to get his high school diploma and eventually to finish his PhD at Simon Fraser University, where he studied Indigenous oral histories.

In 1982, he returned to Skeetchestn as chief, a post he would hold for the next 30 years. Slowly, says Ignace, cultural burning came back to the community, but always limited by the reserve鈥檚 borders.

FIRE HITS INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES HARDEST

Robert Gray, one of the white paper鈥檚 seven authors, says it鈥檚 time for the B.C. government to relinquish its hold on a paradigm that has created a 鈥渢icking time bomb鈥 in the province鈥檚 forests.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no grand strategy,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is a massive blind spot.鈥

To stop the biggest fires from spreading, the report says any given landscape must have at least half its dry undergrowth and downed trees removed through thinning, species conversion or prescribed burning.

From there, a massive investment needs to be made to create economies to remove and process the billions of tonnes of wood fuels sitting in forests.

That means supporting First Nations to defend their communities and prevent fires in the first place.

鈥淭hey were burning to create conditions that allowed them to survive on the landscape,鈥 says Gray. 鈥淲e can learn a lot from that.鈥

Already the fire record shows the area burned per year in B.C. has doubled since 1970, says Daniels, the forest ecologist, who was not involved in producing the report but was among its signatories.

In Lytton, it wasn鈥檛 just the town that was decimated. More than 800 people from surrounding Indigenous communities were displaced by the fire, forced to flee as homes and buildings burned.

Minister of Public Safety Mike Farnworth has admitted the government failed to properly communicate with the Nlaka鈥檖amux Nation Tribal Council and Oregon Jack Creek Band.

And in Ignace鈥檚 community near Kamloops, public officials acknowledged emergency planners failed to properly communicate with the chief and council as the Sparks Lake wildfire bore down on the Skeetchestsn reserve and triggered a massive evacuation in early July.

Ignace says he watched wildfires light up the ridge overlooking his home. Within hours, tongues of flame had leapt down the valley, threatening the community of 250 people.

In the lead-up to the evacuation, current Skeetchestsn Chief Darrel Draney says the First Nation was having trouble getting heard.

鈥淣o red shirts anywhere. No aircraft. Not even a visit,鈥 he says.

Indigenous people make up less than five per cent of Canada鈥檚 population. But of the 522,000 people evacuated because of wildfire between 1980 and 2020, over a third lived on reserves and nearly half the evacuations occurred in communities where more than 50 per cent of the population was Indigenous, according to the 91原创 Wildland Fire Evacuation Database.

Across Canada, the number of reserves evacuated due to wildfire doubled over the past decade; in B.C., the number climbed 119 per cent.

Indigenous communities are on the front line of wildfires, says Christianson, who manages the database, but are often sidelined when it comes to deciding how to deal with the threat.

鈥淚t鈥檚 crazy how disproportionately impacted Indigenous people are,鈥 she says.

CALL FOR CHANGE

Once fire crews arrived at Skeetchestn, both sides started working together, with local experts leading tactical back burns to halt the fire鈥檚 advance.

鈥淥ur hunters tell us when the wind changes. They know that. They have to know that. They know where all the water is, where the roads are,鈥 says Draney. 鈥淪keetchestn is the brains of this fire. The ministry is the brawn.鈥

So far, firefighters and the First Nation have been able to keep the Sparks Lake fire from burning the homes of the Skeetchestsn First Nation in what Draney says 鈥渟hould be a precedent that鈥檚 set.鈥 The evacuation order was ended by the band Aug. 4.

Outside an emergency, however, the process to approve prescribed burns off-reserve can be daunting, and experts interviewed for this story say cultural burning remains marginalized and limited to reserves in most communities.

鈥淲e kind of have this centralized system, and the impact on 91原创s shows it鈥檚 not working out well,鈥 says Christianson, who is worried it鈥檚 going to take a massive inferno on the scale of the 2019-20 Australian bush-fire season for the government to take serious action.

After the devastating 2017 wildfire season, which threatened several First Nation communities including the Skeetchestn Indian Band, the B.C. government recognized it needed to ramp up prescribed burning with Indigenous communities.

The B.C. Wildfire Service now publicly acknowledges that prescribed burns help prevent mega-fire. In June, the B.C. government released an 鈥渋ntentions paper鈥 on forestry management, as well as a draft action plan to meet its obligations under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). Both underscore the importance of reviving cultural burning to prevent wildfires.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge opportunity,鈥 says Cliff Chapman, director of provincial operations for the wildfire service. 鈥淎nd really now it鈥檚 about doing that at scale and ensuring the funding mechanisms are in place so that every community can do that.鈥

There鈥檚 a long way to go.

Between 2010 and 2019, an average of 5,000 hectares were burned in prescribed or cultural fires across the province. That鈥檚 less than 1.5 per cent of the yearly average of 350,000 hectares of forest scorched by wildfire over the same decade, according to Tyler Hooper, spokesman for the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy.

In 2020, those already low numbers plummeted. The COVID-19 pandemic and prevailing weather conditions meant the area treated by prescribed fire in B.C. dropped by 86 per cent, according the ministry.

The ministry says it鈥檚 working with First Nations communities 鈥渢o get burn projects off the ground鈥 and has spent $7.7 million to do that between 2019 and 2021. Another $50 million has been allocated over those three years to reduce wildfire risk on Crown land.

But experts like Gray say that鈥檚 not nearly enough, and it fails to consider a drawn-out burn-permitting process that keeps many Indigenous firekeepers off wide tracts of land bloated with wood fuel.

PERMIT PROCESS DELAYS ACTION

Getting approval for a prescribed burn requires filling out a 12-page burn-plan document that includes precise scientific measurements of the landscape, soil and plant life. The plans must also be signed by a licensed forestry professional, in part to ensure safety.

Burn permits take into consideration conditions on the ground and in the air to ensure ecosystems aren鈥檛 damaged and communities aren鈥檛 bombarded by smoke or threatened by out-of-control fires.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a 鈥楪oldilocks鈥 range of conditions that produce the right outcomes 鈥 fire that burns what we want to it to burn, at the right intensity, for the right duration,鈥 writes Hooper.

Anyone applying for a burn plan must receive an official鈥檚 approval in writing 60 days before the proposed ignition. But in practice, the process takes much longer, says Ignace.

Even the Environment Ministry admits the planning process for a prescribed burn 鈥渢akes six months to multiple years.鈥

All of that, says Ignace, makes scaling up cultural burning under current laws next to impossible, especially when a changing climate makes it harder to gauge when to burn safely, as his great-grandfather did.

鈥淯nless the government wakes up and transforms its forest-management practices 鈥 [we will] see the mother of all fires in British Columbia.鈥

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